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Master Switch/Contactor and Starter Questions

 
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dgaldrich



Joined: 24 Apr 2009
Posts: 267
Location: Naples, Fl and Belfast, ME

PostPosted: Sun Jun 30, 2013 8:07 am    Post subject: Master Switch/Contactor and Starter Questions Reply with quote

Hi Robert et al.

Two issues to discuss

Under what circumstances could you recommend/condone the use of a simple mechanical master switch (as in Z-17) rather than a traditional battery contactor?

I am building an aircraft with very similar loads to Z-17 but will have an 18 amp dynamo/PMG and an Odyssey 680 battery so I guess the real question is, do those two items change the ability to use a switch versus the additional complexity and "hold" current usage of a contactor?

Second issue is wiring the starter. Mine has two separate terminals. One for the serious current and one for the solenoid. I'm planning to wire the battery directly to the starter with #2AWG cable and use #16AWG from the solenoid to the start switch and back through a 5 or 10 amp CB. All of the Z- diagrams show a start contactor so I'm wondering if my planning passes the "idiot" test.

Thanks.

Dave


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peter(at)sportingaero.com
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PostPosted: Sun Jun 30, 2013 1:09 pm    Post subject: Master Switch/Contactor and Starter Questions Reply with quote

Dave,

Here's a couple of ideas for you to consider,

1. If a switch is used as the 'master switch' as you suggest, some
distance from the battery, consider installing a 20 or 25A (or similar)
c/b close to the battery, and in reach of the pilot, so if need be
breaker can be pulled and the system will be cold from there on.
2. Fit a starter relay close to the battery - that way you do not have
hot thick wires running to the engine all the time. The issue then is
the starter relay welding itself shut, where releasing the starter
button will not stop the starter. Some modern starters with an on board
solenoid allow for the path energising the solenoid to be broken - such
as SkyTec NL series. If a switch is added in the cockpit in this path
then the starter can be turned off with a welded starter relay.

Regards, Peter

On 30/06/2013 17:07, dgaldrich wrote:
Quote:


Hi Robert et al.

Two issues to discuss

Under what circumstances could you recommend/condone the use of a simple mechanical master switch (as in Z-17) rather than a traditional battery contactor?

I am building an aircraft with very similar loads to Z-17 but will have an 18 amp dynamo/PMG and an Odyssey 680 battery so I guess the real question is, do those two items change the ability to use a switch versus the additional complexity and "hold" current usage of a contactor?

Second issue is wiring the starter. Mine has two separate terminals. One for the serious current and one for the solenoid. I'm planning to wire the battery directly to the starter with #2AWG cable and use #16AWG from the solenoid to the start switch and back through a 5 or 10 amp CB. All of the Z- diagrams show a start contactor so I'm wondering if my planning passes the "idiot" test.

Thanks.

Dave


Read this topic online here:

http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=403652#403652



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Eric M. Jones



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 565
Location: Massachusetts

PostPosted: Sun Jun 30, 2013 3:45 pm    Post subject: Re: Master Switch/Contactor and Starter Questions Reply with quote

The FAA doesn't require a battery contactor and you car doesn't have one. The contactor per FAA "must disconnect the battery with one hand in the event of an emergency" e.g. crash.

Nascar has the same issues, but the cars' enormous vibration has pretty much forced racecar builders to use battery switches instead.

I recommend Flaming River remote battery switches, but there are others.

The entire experimental aircraft can be built without contactors, and I think it's a good approach.


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PostPosted: Fri Jul 05, 2013 10:28 am    Post subject: Master Switch/Contactor and Starter Questions Reply with quote

So....on the SkyTec permanent magnet starter, the diode goes from the
little terminal to where - ground on the starter case? By the way, I
only measure approximately .3 ohms from the small terminal to the
starter case. I thought the coil would have more resistance than that.
The starter comes from SkyTec with a jumper from small terminal to the
fat wire terminal.

Ed Holyoke
On 7/4/2013 6:18 AM, Robert L. Nuckolls, III wrote:
Quote:
If the starter is a PM version, the builder can
take advantage of the "I" terminal on many modern
starter cotactors and use it to SUPPLY current
to the engagement solenoid. This provides for
instant removal of coil power when the starter
switch is opened and prevents 'delayed disengagement'.

In this case, the builder would do well to have
diode coil suppression on BOTH the external contactor
coil AND the solenoid/contactor coil on the
starter.

Bob . . .


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PostPosted: Fri Jul 05, 2013 10:59 am    Post subject: Master Switch/Contactor and Starter Questions Reply with quote

Ed,

Do you get the same resistance reading in both directions? What if you
swap your meter leads? If there's an internal snubbing diode there,
you'll get a really low resistance reading in the direction the diode
conducts in and you'll read the coil resistance with the meter leads
swapped the other way around.

.3 ohms at 14V would pull about 47 amps. Probably more than your starter
switch can handle. I'm thinking it should be like 30 ohms or more.

Bill

On 7/5/13 11:28 AM, Ed wrote:
Quote:


So....on the SkyTec permanent magnet starter, the diode goes from the
little terminal to where - ground on the starter case? By the way, I
only measure approximately .3 ohms from the small terminal to the
starter case. I thought the coil would have more resistance than that.
The starter comes from SkyTec with a jumper from small terminal to the
fat wire terminal.

Ed Holyoke
On 7/4/2013 6:18 AM, Robert L. Nuckolls, III wrote:
> If the starter is a PM version, the builder can
> take advantage of the "I" terminal on many modern
> starter cotactors and use it to SUPPLY current
> to the engagement solenoid. This provides for
> instant removal of coil power when the starter
> switch is opened and prevents 'delayed disengagement'.
>
> In this case, the builder would do well to have
> diode coil suppression on BOTH the external contactor
> coil AND the solenoid/contactor coil on the
> starter.
>
> Bob . . .



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PostPosted: Fri Jul 05, 2013 8:29 pm    Post subject: Master Switch/Contactor and Starter Questions Reply with quote



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PostPosted: Fri Jul 05, 2013 8:55 pm    Post subject: Master Switch/Contactor and Starter Questions Reply with quote

I knew on some level that low ohms means high current. That's why I
questioned it, but I didn't do the math. 35 amps is a bunch! I'm not
planning to throw away my starter contactor anytime soon. I did measure
the coil both directions and it is the same.

Ed Holyoke

On 7/5/2013 12:29 PM, Robert L. Nuckolls, III wrote:
Quote:

<nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com>

At 01:58 PM 7/5/2013, you wrote:
>
>
> Ed,
>
> Do you get the same resistance reading in both directions? What if
> you swap your meter leads? If there's an internal snubbing diode
> there, you'll get a really low resistance reading in the direction
> the diode conducts in and you'll read the coil resistance with the
> meter leads swapped the other way around.
>
> .3 ohms at 14V would pull about 47 amps. Probably more than your
> starter switch can handle. I'm thinking it should be like 30 ohms or
> more.
>
> Bill

40 amps . . . yeah that's about right.
See:

http://tinyurl.com/op5cs2g

Bob . . .



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Bob McC



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 258
Location: Toronto, ON

PostPosted: Sat Jul 06, 2013 5:20 am    Post subject: Master Switch/Contactor and Starter Questions Reply with quote

Quote:
I knew on some level that low ohms means high current. That's why I
questioned it, but I didn't do the math. 35 amps is a bunch! I'm not
planning to throw away my starter contactor anytime soon. I did measure
the coil both directions and it is the same.

Ed Holyoke

And that's why you don't re-invent the wheel, but rather follow the
conventional wisdom of using a "standard" starter contactor ahead of the
solenoid built into the starter OR use a buffer relay to energize the
solenoid just as all modern cars do and as Bob has explained in a previous
post. (your starter won't operate without the built in solenoid as that is
what engages the pinion with the ring gear)

Bob McC


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PostPosted: Sat Jul 06, 2013 7:42 pm    Post subject: Master Switch/Contactor and Starter Questions Reply with quote

Howdy Bob,

When I said contactor, I meant the firewall variety, a B&C unit. That's the one I'm not throwing away, Wink I did not measure the coil resistance on that one.

I replaced the starter solenoid because it was demanding 20 - 30 starter button pushes before it would crank. The starter contactor on the firewall clunks reliably. The new solenoid coil measured .3 ohm. I don't figure that to be very accurate, but it is repeatable. The VOM leads measured about .5 and then .8 for the coil so I called it .3 ohm. I was just a bit surprised that it was that low, even if I were off a little. Now that I read your piece about contactors and soleniods, I understand why the low resistance. My comment about keeping the contactor was that I'd just as soon not do that to my starter switch.

By the way, the Borg Warner (BWD) part number for the starter solenoid I just put on my PM SkyTec is: S5613
I got mine at O'Rielly's auto parts for ~$25. That's much better than $200 flat rate repair at SkyTec + shipping and wait for it.

Speaking of diodes, is this overkill?
http://www.amazon.com/Amico-Molded-Plastic-Rectifier-Diodes/dp/B009IN1KB8/ref=sr_1_6?ie=UTF8&qid=1373088088&sr=8-6&keywords=diodes

I can get these, but the shipping is more than the diodes:
http://www.digikey.com/scripts/DKSearch/dksus.dll?Detail&itemSeq=133108363&uq=635086673453750862

Pax,

Ed

On 7/6/2013 6:12 AM, Robert L. Nuckolls, III wrote:

[quote] At 11:54 PM 7/5/2013, you wrote:
Quote:
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: Ed <decaclops(at)gmail.com> (decaclops(at)gmail.com)

I knew on some level that low ohms means high current. That's why I questioned it, but I didn't do the math. 35 amps is a bunch! I'm not planning to throw away my starter contactor anytime soon. I did measure the coil both directions and it is the same.

Which starter contactor are we talking about?
One built onto a starter or an external contactor?

When you mentioned 0.3 ohms, the first image in
my head was for a contactor built onto a starter.
These DO present a very low terminal resistance in the
de-energized mode. There's mechanism inside that
demands a ~30A closure current and a more moderate,
~10A holding current. . .

Run of the mill external contactors

http://tinyurl.com/kqphmh

. . . have no such shift in demand and will require
~5A to close and hold the contacts. Further, the models
sold previously by us and now by B&C have built
in coil suppression diodes.

Be wary of low resistance measurements with the
garden variety multimeter. They're not designed
to 'wash out' the effects of lead length and their
excitation current to a device under test is
too low to offer useful resolution of low resistance
measurements.

This limitation is what prompted the design of a
4-wire low resistance measurements adapter. This
was published in a Beech shop notes bulletin some
years back. We had a rash of unnecessary replacement
of landing gear down-lock indicator switches on
fielded aircraft. This was traced to the quality
of contact resistance measurements using the
garden variety multi-meter. The task demanded
instrumentation better suited to the task.

http://tinyurl.com/4l3tuj6

A few years later I crafted this product based
on the earlier article . . .

http://tinyurl.com/6g9e7vm

The value of this technique for low resistance
measurement is described in the Grounding
chapter of the 'Connection. The same technique
is useful for getting meaningful data on coil
and contact resistance of the more robust components
in the ship's electrical system.



Bob . . .
Quote:

[b]


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PostPosted: Sat Jul 06, 2013 7:44 pm    Post subject: Master Switch/Contactor and Starter Questions Reply with quote

I'm with you there, Bob.

Ed
On 7/6/2013 6:19 AM, Bob McCallum wrote:
Quote:

> I knew on some level that low ohms means high current. That's why I
> questioned it, but I didn't do the math. 35 amps is a bunch! I'm not
> planning to throw away my starter contactor anytime soon. I did measure
> the coil both directions and it is the same.
>
> Ed Holyoke
And that's why you don't re-invent the wheel, but rather follow the
conventional wisdom of using a "standard" starter contactor ahead of the
solenoid built into the starter OR use a buffer relay to energize the
solenoid just as all modern cars do and as Bob has explained in a previous
post. (your starter won't operate without the built in solenoid as that is
what engages the pinion with the ring gear)

Bob McC


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