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John M Tipton
Joined: 07 Aug 2018 Posts: 45 Location: Devon - England
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Posted: Wed May 01, 2019 7:43 am Post subject: TWISTED PAIRS |
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Hi Guys (Bob)
When a twisted pair is required (eg: Power and ground to Radio), do you take both back to the fuse panel, then lead off the ground wire to the ground block ( which is a return route - L form) or lead off the ground wire to the ground block en route (it's only half distance to the ground block - ie: T form)
To clarify: the route to the ground block is 15 inches and to the Fuse bus 30 inches.
Regards
John
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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
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Posted: Wed May 01, 2019 1:37 pm Post subject: TWISTED PAIRS |
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At 10:43 AM 5/1/2019, you wrote:
Quote: | --> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "John M Tipton" <john(at)tiptonuk.eu>
Hi Guys (Bob)
When a twisted pair is required (eg: Power and ground to Radio), do you take both back to the fuse panel, then lead off the ground wire to the ground block ( which is a return route - L form) or lead off the ground wire to the ground block en route (it's only half distance to the ground block - ie: T form)
To clarify: the route to the ground block is 15 inches and to the Fuse bus 30 inches. |
I can't imagine why anyone would twist
the ground and power wires on any device
(other than the illumination lamp to a
whisky compass up on the windshield).
What's the product and what, if any, reason
is given in instructions for doing this
to the wires?
Bob . . .
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jim(at)PoogieBearRanch.co Guest
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Posted: Wed May 01, 2019 3:19 pm Post subject: TWISTED PAIRS |
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Doesn't the remote panel switch for ELTs generally specify the use of
twisted-pair wiring? Seems like I recall seeing that when I was
considering replacing my ELT.
Jim Parker
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art(at)zemon.name Guest
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Posted: Wed May 01, 2019 4:02 pm Post subject: TWISTED PAIRS |
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My Artex did not
-- Art Z.
Sent from my phone. Please excuse brevity and bizarre typos.
On Wed, May 1, 2019, 6:34 PM <jim(at)poogiebearranch.com (jim(at)poogiebearranch.com)> wrote:
[quote]--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: <jim(at)poogiebearranch.com (jim(at)poogiebearranch.com)>
Doesn't the remote panel switch for ELTs generally specify the use of
twisted-pair wiring? Seems like I recall seeing that when I was
considering replacing my ELT.
Jim Parker
------
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John M Tipton
Joined: 07 Aug 2018 Posts: 45 Location: Devon - England
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John M Tipton
Joined: 07 Aug 2018 Posts: 45 Location: Devon - England
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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
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Posted: Thu May 02, 2019 5:06 am Post subject: TWISTED PAIRS |
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At 06:18 PM 5/1/2019, you wrote:
Quote: | --> AeroElectric-List message posted by: <jim(at)poogiebearranch.com>
Doesn't the remote panel switch for ELTs generally specify the use of
twisted-pair wiring? Seems like I recall seeing that when I was
considering replacing my ELT. |
Could be . . . and I too have suggested it for situations
where one is building a long run of 2 or more wires. I've
often used a drill motor to build an independent bundle
of wires, usually small (22 or 20AWG max) that all terminated
in the same place.
Twisting is, at best, a matter of craftsmanship/convenience.
A bundle of wires in a 'straight lay' is stiff while
a twisted array remains flexible while physically
constrained in a handy bundle. When building pendant
cables for ground test equipment, I often twist the
array of wires before pulling them through a 'snake
skin' . . . makes for a really compliant test tool.
Mitigation of magnetic/electro-static coupling by twisting
SEEMS like a good idea . . . except that those coupling
modes are exceedingly weak and practical ONLY when the
pair to be twisting is either a STRONG potential antagonist
or VULNERABLE victim.
The DC power leads are NOT potential antagonists
nor are they vulnerable.
The fact that either of these conditions
is a consideration for integrating a particular
electro-whizzy into your airplane is a CONFESSION
of poor attention to details . . . like Mil-Std-704,
DO-160, etc . . . or a lack of understanding.
It's like the ol' avionics master switch meme intended
to ward off evil, non-existent 'spikes' while cranking
an engine. Once planted, it will grow and thrive like
an intellectual fungus long after advances in understanding
and application of the SCIENCE has shown it to be floobydust.
The short answer is: when your electro-whizzy's installation
manual calls for twisting for 'noise' or avionics master switch
for 'spikes', a healthy dose of skepticism is called for.
Bob . . .
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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
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Posted: Thu May 02, 2019 5:26 am Post subject: TWISTED PAIRS |
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At 04:07 AM 5/2/2019, you wrote:
The folks who wrote this did a better
than average job, but their lack of
experience in air-frame wiring is
obvious.
The narrative about wire sizes is
startling. 24AWG wire in an airframe
is more difficult to work with . . .
26AWG would NOT be recommended.
I would not suggest such a thing for
OBAM aircraft and would think LONG
and HARD before calling it out in
a TC aircraft.
Premier (B390) airframe wiring used
a lot of 24 . . . but this was a 'busy'
airplane with miles of wire in it.
Weight savings was significant. But
the people who had to work with it
on the line and in the field were
less than enthusiastic.
Our airplanes (with mere dozens of
feet of wire), hooking up with
smaller than 22AWG is of no practical
benefit.
The shielded trios use to wire the
servos is handy from a fabrication/
installation perspective. The
EMC considerations for using
a shielded trio may be (but
unlikely) valid. But using off-
the-spool, pre-twisted, pre-twisted,
shielded wire is very convenient.
Bob . . .
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echristley(at)att.net Guest
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Posted: Thu May 02, 2019 6:19 am Post subject: TWISTED PAIRS |
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I like to twist power and ground for organizational reasons. It just cleans up the installation.
On Wednesday, May 1, 2019, 5:38:13 PM EDT, Robert L. Nuckolls, III <nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com> wrote:
At 10:43 AM 5/1/2019, you wrote:
Quote: | --> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "John M Tipton" <john(at)tiptonuk.eu>
Hi Guys (Bob)
When a twisted pair is required (eg: Power and ground to Radio), do you take both back to the fuse panel, then lead off the ground wire to the ground block ( which is a return route - L form) or lead off the ground wire to the ground block en route (it's only half distance to the ground block - ie: T form)
To clarify: the route to the ground block is 15 inches and to the Fuse bus 30 inches. |
I can't imagine why anyone would twist
the ground and power wires on any device
(other than the illumination lamp to a
whisky compass up on the windshield).
What's the product and what, if any, reason
is given in instructions for doing this
to the wires?
Bob . . .
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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
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Posted: Thu May 02, 2019 6:54 am Post subject: TWISTED PAIRS |
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At 09:18 AM 5/2/2019, you wrote:
Quote: | I like to twist power and ground for organizational reasons. It just cleans up the installation. |
Hear hear!
Bob . . .
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art(at)zemon.name Guest
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Posted: Thu May 02, 2019 4:58 pm Post subject: TWISTED PAIRS |
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I didn't twist much of anything. I used red and black wire and laced the bundles. It ended up looking nice and the lacing was peaceful, satisfying work.
I did twist the wires for my OAT probe and that was just to make the pair easier to handle since it runs the length of the fuselage.
-- Art Z.
Sent from my phone. Please excuse brevity and bizarre typos.
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