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Flexible Wire for Pull Out Fuse Tray?

 
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Valin



Joined: 13 Apr 2010
Posts: 31
Location: Colorado

PostPosted: Tue Apr 28, 2015 2:50 pm    Post subject: Flexible Wire for Pull Out Fuse Tray? Reply with quote

Hello Bob,

Thanks again for all your help over the years of our (wife and my) Lancair Legacy project.

In our electrical system design, we’ve gone with a pull-out fuse tray that is on the right side of the instrument panel. It’s about 4 “ tall, 2” wide, 24” long and uses blade fuses that light up when they’ve blown. All the fuse blocks are easily visible to the pilot when the tray is pulled out.

We chose this solution because of its simplicity and minimum real estate on the Legacy’s small instrument panel. In its implementation, though, I’m a bit concerned with the fatigue life of the thick wires running to it with the tray being pulled out and in for each flight with before takeoff checks. The MIL-W-22759 wire in these gauges is fairly stiff… There are several since the diodes between buses are on the avionics shelf because of fuse tray space limitations.

Is there a very flexible 10 and 8 AWG wire that we could use for the connections between our fuse tray and avionics shelf, that can better handle the fuse tray motion/flexing than the MIL-W-22759, and is air worthy?

Thanks,

Valin Thorn
Lancair Legacy Project
Colorado
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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 29, 2015 11:14 am    Post subject: Flexible Wire for Pull Out Fuse Tray? Reply with quote

At 17:48 2015-04-28, you wrote:
Hello Bob,

Thanks again for all your help over the years of
our (wife and my) Lancair Legacy project.

In our electrical system design, we’ve gone with
a pull-out fuse tray that is on the right side of
the instrument panel. It’s about 4 “ tall, 2”
wide, 24” long and uses blade fuses that light up
when they’ve blown. All the fuse blocks are
easily visible to the pilot when the tray is pulled out.

We chose this solution because of its simplicity
and minimum real estate on the Legacy’s small
instrument panel. In its implementation, though,
I’m a bit concerned with the fatigue life of the
thick wires running to it with the tray being
pulled out and in for each flight with before
takeoff checks. The MIL-W-22759 wire in these
gauges is fairly stiff… There are several since
the diodes between buses are on the avionics
shelf because of fuse tray space limitations.

Is there a very flexible 10 and 8 AWG wire that
we could use for the connections between our fuse
tray and avionics shelf, that can better handle
the fuse tray motion/flexing than the MIL-W-22759, and is air worthy?
Check out a big-box store's electrical
supplies. You can get a chunk of 10-3 drop
cord (SJ, SJO)and cut away the insulation to
acquire three, very flexible and robust
runs of 10AWG wire.

You won't find 8AWG drop cord but a welding
shop can sell you 6AWG welding cable that's
only a little larger than your 8AWG and probably
more flexible than the 8AWG Tefzel.
Bob . . .


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jluckey(at)pacbell.net
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 29, 2015 12:17 pm    Post subject: Flexible Wire for Pull Out Fuse Tray? Reply with quote

You can get a chunk of 10-3 drop cord (SJ, SJO)and cut away the insulation to acquire three, very flexible and robust runs of 10AWG wire.
Bob, is that insulation "kosher" with respect to combustion by-products.

I thought that was the reason that Tefzel was the recommended wire/insulation type.
-Jeff




On Wednesday, April 29, 2015 12:24 PM, "Robert L. Nuckolls, III" <nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com> wrote:



--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "Robert L. Nuckolls, III" <nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com (nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com)>

At 17:48 2015-04-28, you wrote:
Hello Bob,

Thanks again for all your help over the years of
our (wife and my) Lancair Legacy project.

In our electrical system design, we’ve gone with
a pull-out fuse tray that is on the right side of
the instrument panel. It’s about 4 “ tall, 2”
wide, 24” long and uses blade fuses that light up
when they’ve blown. All the fuse blocks are
easily visible to the pilot when the tray is pulled out.

We chose this solution because of its simplicity
and minimum real estate on the Legacy’s small
instrument panel. In its implementation, though,
I’m a bit concerned with the fatigue life of the
thick wires running to it with the tray being
pulled out and in for each flight with before
takeoff checks. The MIL-W-22759 wire in these
gauges is fairly stiff… There are several since
the diodes between buses are on the avionics
shelf because of fuse tray space limitations.

Is there a very flexible 10 and 8 AWG wire that
we could use for the connections between our fuse
tray and avionics shelf, that can better handle
the fuse tray motion/flexing than the MIL-W-22759, and is air worthy?
Check out a big-box store's electrical
supplies. You can get a chunk of 10-3 drop
cord (SJ, SJO)and cut away the insulation to
acquire three, very flexible and robust
runs of 10AWG wire.

You won't find 8AWG drop cord but a welding
shop can sell you 6AWG welding cable that's
only a little larger than your 8AWG and probably
more flexible than the 8AWG Tefzel.


cs.com/Navigator?AeroElectric-List" target="_blank">http://www.matronics.= --> <a href="http://www.matronics.com/contribution" target=====


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 29, 2015 12:55 pm    Post subject: Flexible Wire for Pull Out Fuse Tray? Reply with quote

At 15:16 2015-04-29, you wrote:
You can get a chunk of 10-3 drop
cord (SJ, SJO)and cut away the insulation to
acquire three, very flexible and robust
runs of 10AWG wire.

Bob, is that insulation "kosher" with respect to combustion by-products.

I thought that was the reason that Tefzel was the recommended
wire/insulation type.

It depends on who you talk too. There's one well
meaning and vocal faction out there that thinks
Tefzel is spawn of the devil . . .

http://tinyurl.com/2f8uz

After you've spent some time in the test
lab letting the smoke out of things, you come
to realize that the flavor of smoke from any
combustible becomes a rather moot point.

Yeah, they do flame tests on insulation . . . by
plying it with a torch! After it appears sufficiently
antagonized that it should burn, you take away
the flame. If I recall the reasoning with any
accuracy, the flaming insulation should not propagate
along the wire, it should self extinguish in so
many seconds, it should not drip flaming
globs of insulation and . . . oh yeah . . .
should be minimally obnoxious to respiratory
system . . . the flavor of a fine pipe tobacco
being a design goal.

I've been present when wires were burned
either by accident or test. I've seen and smelled
lots of smoke . . . and there were no reminders
of grandpa's favorite pipe.

Most the flaming materials wienies seem to
think that there is increased risks for having
materials that will PROPAGATE or PROMOTE a fire
from any/un-named source . . . not many pilots I
know fly around with propane torches. Getting
a wire lit up by hard faulting to a battery is
exceedingly problematic unless the insulation is
VERY flammable . . . but wait, seems like those
fuses and circuit breakers are supposed to
keep things from going that far in the first
place. No . . .?

Airplanes have been wired with everything
from cotton covered rubber to super-exotic-
unobtanium for over a century. Yet in the annals
of aviation accidents, I'm aware of no incident
that was blamed on flammability of the insulation.
There may be some out there but they're a vanishingly
small proportion of totality of incidents.

INTEGRITY of insulation, yes. Swissair 111 wiring
sparked and set the airplane's cabin insulation
on fire. Look at the pictures of the 777 that
belly flopped in SFO. LOTS of stuff throughout
the cabin burned with some vigor . . . and I
doubt that anyone was reminded of their grandpa's
pipe in that incident either.

If the flaming materials wienies were really
taking their jobs seriously, then every new
requirement that strives for happy fires in the
cabin would have grounded the existing fleet
until sub-standard materials were replaced.

Hundreds of thousands of miles of 'sub-standard'
wire are airborne someplace over the planet
as we speak . . .

I suggest that the lowest risk path to personal
flight is grounded in good FMEA, craftsmanship,
and plan-b for highest risk failures. If
you've got serious smoke in the cockpit
that doesn't quit when you turn of the master
switch . . . well . . . the flavor of that
smoke is the least of your worries. I prefer to
design for no-fire as opposed to designing for
friendly fire.

Bob . . .


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