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Final Elect. System Review

 
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bcone1381



Joined: 25 Apr 2017
Posts: 42
Location: Southeast Michigan

PostPosted: Fri Nov 18, 2022 8:52 am    Post subject: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

Please help me finalize my electrical system. It based off Bob’s Z101 and taylored to meet rather meager demands. I am moving from the conceptual phase to the fuselage as we speak, installing components today.

My Bearhawk Patrol, like a Supercub, is VFR, with merely a Garmin G5, Engine Monitoring System, Surefly ignition, Comm, and Xpndr, and portable navigation.

I have done my load analysis, drawn all schematics for individual circuits. 
My diagram is attached. I transformed Bob’s Z101 Engine Bus to my Aux Bus (Essential Bus). Continuous draw is 1.5A (2.3A intermittent) plus a single USB charger max of 2.5A. Please criticize me if the simple switch (Aux Bus - Aux Alt) is a risk that should fixed with a solenoid.

The left side of the Battery Contactor has 12 AWG wire powering the Aux Bus through a switch (AUX BUS - AUX ALT) that is not protected. Should I add protection to that circuit? The length of the circuit is about 30 inches. I have a
B & C slow acting 23A midi fuse that might go well there.

Any other feedback? Bob?


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user9253



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PostPosted: Fri Nov 18, 2022 10:49 am    Post subject: Re: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

In case of smoke in the cockpit or in case of an imminent forced landing, the pilot should have the ability to shut off all electrical power as close to the source(s) as possible. Does your design meet that objective? Relays can be used for remote control.
-
The surefly electronic ignition is powered by the battery bus and by the aux bus. Are those two sources isolated with diodes? If not, the aux bus will always be powered by the battery.
-
Long wires do not necessary have to be protected by a fuse or circuit breaker if physically protected against shorting. Use your best judgement.


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bcone1381



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PostPosted: Sat Nov 19, 2022 6:00 am    Post subject: Re: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

user9253 wrote:
In case of smoke in the cockpit or in case of an imminent forced landing, the pilot should have the ability to shut off all electrical power as close to the source(s) as possible. Does your design meet that objective? Relays can be used for remote control.
-
The surefly electronic ignition is powered by the battery bus and by the aux bus. Are those two sources isolated with diodes? If not, the aux bus will always be powered by the battery.
-
Long wires do not necessary have to be protected by a fuse or circuit breaker if physically protected against shorting. Use your best judgement.


User 9253, Thanks for this exercise! I work alone. I am an EAB builder. A is for Amateur. My design skills are not good and you help me think. The Z101 is so so helpful.

1) Re: Shut off power close to the source. It does not meet that objective and I see that a relay would. How do we balance that objective with the objective of simplicity of a switch on a low Amp circuit? My memory says that Bob in the past said 5A was the threshold. What is Industry Best Practice...a relay or switch?

2) Re Surefly Ignition Module (SIM): I am installing two SIM's. The L. SIM source is the Battery Bus, the R. SIM source from the Aux Bus. Good Catch. I will update my diagrams. Does this satisfy your concern? I see no other bus bus power issues.

3) Thanks!

Like I said, you help me think. If I explain my thinking it will not give me an industry best practice that experts know. Its a debate. My thinking is not an Industry Best Practice without "Your thinking can be improved, here is my concern, do it this way because...."


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user9253



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PostPosted: Sat Nov 19, 2022 7:48 am    Post subject: Re: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

Sometimes there is no right or wrong answer, but rather a matter of personal preference. I prefer simplicity: Just one bus. But to each his own.
What is best practice, a relay controlled by a small switch or just a switch?
There is no right or wrong answer. You will have to decide. Consider the advantages and disadvantages. If the relay fails, can you continue to fly safely?


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bcone1381



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PostPosted: Sat Nov 19, 2022 12:44 pm    Post subject: Re: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

8253;

I think of Art .... I see now we are playing with "Industrial Arts." Art has many answers. Math is not art, is foundational for design, but it has one only one right answer. You helped me see the Art side of electrical system design.


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johnbright



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PostPosted: Sat Nov 19, 2022 3:28 pm    Post subject: Re: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

[quote="bcone1381"]
user9253 wrote:
... 1) Re: Shut off power close to the source. It does not meet that objective and I see that a relay would... My memory says that Bob in the past said 5A was the threshold..."


Ref FAR 23.1361 "Master Switch Arrangement". FAR 23.1361 calls for protective device of 5A or less but Bob Nuckolls' advice is to allow 7-1/2 A fuses since fuses are faster than breakers, that's why the largest fuse you see on the battery bus in Z schematics is 7-1/2A.

https://www.risingup.com/fars/info/part23-1361-FAR.shtml

BTW, fuses are normally sized (max load) / (0.75) = fuse rating. Max load on a 7-1/2A fuse should be 5.6A.

As you can see, a 23A MIDI fuse does not meet FAR23.1361. Also it is considered bad practice to put two fuses in series even though the 10A fuses on your aux bus are smaller than a MIDI 23.

As mentioned, FAR 23.1361 is for fire-in-the-cockpit and off-field landing scenarios but it's also for service scenario, that's why auto service manuals say first thing disconnect the battery negative terminal.

Thoughts:
    Z101 has the backup alternator B lead on the battery but you show it on the aux bus. Not necessarily a bad thing but IMO it's not correct to call it Z101.
    Do you choose the PM backup alternator because it self-starts with no battery present? FYI there is the Monkworkz PM vacuum pad alternator available now that makes 30A at 1800 Lycoming RPM (its B lead cannot be connected directly to the battery because it presents a ~30mA passive load).
    There's room for opinion but I would put a 20A or 40A automotive relay (like B&C sells) in the aux bus feed.
    I can't imagine why the Surefly fuse on the battery bus can't be 7-1/2A. The four-cylinder Surefly draws 0.7 +/- 0.2A per the IM. OTOH the Surefly is proxim to the battery bus so the 10A fuse could be argued to meet FAR 23.1361.


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bcone1381



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PostPosted: Sat Nov 19, 2022 5:29 pm    Post subject: Re: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

FAR23.1361 Thanks for this reference. I will be adding the Solenoid now.
I see my switch is not adjacent to the bus, whereas a solenoid is and it will eliminate the Midi Fuse.

Fuse size. I’ll search out more feedback regarding circuit protection. I refer often to AC 43.13 table 11-3 titled DC Wire and Circuit Protection when manufacturers instructions are not available.

Surefly Instructions call out 14 AWG with 10A circuit protection but I find no fault in your assessment.

My choice is the SD-8 is due to me having it on hand. I've read about the Monkworkz and think is numbers are impressive. I think it will be the GO TO alternator for EAB. But the SD-8 is enough for my backup, is very light weight and may be one of the most proven reliable alternators on the market. The Monkworkz is new and It’s hard to get good data on component failure rates.


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 20, 2022 12:54 am    Post subject: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

Dear Brooks,

As you are VFR only, and I guess your G5 has a back-up battery, do you need more than one alternator and one bus? Its only more cost, weight and complexity that won't buy you much in terms of continued flight after a failure as the battery will do that with the simple system you are planning.
If the alternator fails figure out what must be switched off to extend battery endurance.
The G5 will provide 4 hours and the portable navigation must have an internal battery, so not that much left.
A typical 15Ah battery will keep your airplane flying until you are out of gas.
Keep everything as simple, and as low parts count, as possible. No point in adding solenoids if a switch can handle the expected load.
Your diagram came over fairly low res, with the text indistinct, but if you really want to cater for loss of the battery connector use the switch you already have to bypass directly to all the busses. If a DPDT switch is used disable the start button circuit so starter loads cannot be put through the switch.
Is circuit protection required on a 12G wire? Perhaps, if you have a large fuse it may be worth adding, the risk is low.
I would delete the always hot (endurance) bus on a simple VFR aircraft - it only runs down the battery. The load analysis always says it is good for several months but my experience is when you haven't made it out to the airport in a month or 6 weeks and have made an hour or two for a quick flight that plan will be sunk by a flat battery.
Is the Surefly on the battery bus and aux bus? Would have thought it should be shut down on the master?
Check the wire gauges you have specified and go for the lightest possible, copper wire adds a lot of weight.

Regards, Peter
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kenryan



Joined: 20 Oct 2009
Posts: 426

PostPosted: Sun Nov 20, 2022 5:08 am    Post subject: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

Different path, but Viking Aircraft Engines, which supplies engines based on the Honda Fit, recommends an electrical system that utilizes one alternator and 2 batteries. They switch which battery gets charged each flight. Has Bob designed an architecture using one alternator and 2 batteries?

On Sat, Nov 19, 2022 at 11:56 PM Peter Pengilly <Peter(at)sportingaero.com (Peter(at)sportingaero.com)> wrote:

[quote]--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "Peter Pengilly" <Peter(at)sportingaero.com (Peter(at)sportingaero.com)>

Dear Brooks,

As you are VFR only, and I guess your G5 has a back-up battery, do you need more than one alternator and one bus? Its only more cost, weight and complexity that won't buy you much in terms of continued flight after a failure as the battery will do that with the simple system you are planning.
If the alternator fails figure out what must be switched off to extend battery endurance.
The G5 will provide 4 hours and the portable navigation must have an internal battery, so not that much left.
A typical 15Ah battery will keep your airplane flying until you are out of gas.
Keep everything as simple, and as low parts count, as possible. No point in adding solenoids if a switch can handle the expected load.
Your diagram came over fairly low res, with the text indistinct, but if you really want to cater for loss of the battery connector use the switch you already have to bypass directly to all the busses. If a DPDT switch is used disable the start button circuit so starter loads cannot be put through the switch.
Is circuit protection required on a 12G wire? Perhaps, if you have a large fuse it may be worth adding, the risk is low.
I would delete the always hot (endurance) bus on a simple VFR aircraft - it only runs down the battery. The load analysis always says it is good for several months but my experience is when you haven't made it out to the airport in a month or 6 weeks and have made an hour or two for a quick flight that plan will be sunk by a flat battery.
Is the Surefly on the battery bus and aux bus? Would have thought it should be shut down on the master?
Check the wire gauges you have specified and go for the lightest possible, copper wire adds a lot of weight.

Regards, Peter


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 20, 2022 6:49 am    Post subject: Re: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

There was another discussion in 2014 on the AeroElectric list about aircraft electrical architecture which includes a schematic by me.
http://forum.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=416668


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 20, 2022 12:48 pm    Post subject: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

Quote:
What is best practice, a relay controlled by a small switch or just a switch?
There is a train of thought to resolving this question.

Generally speaking, relays are used to carry larger
currents than one wishes to bring to the panel on
a switch. Good examples include starter and battery
contactors (although the Piper Pacer had battery
under seat and both circuits were manual switches
on the panel under occupants legs!). Minimizing length
of the high current power path can be an important
consideration. One might also choose to use relays
to centrally locate power management tasks and simplify
control wiring. For example: Z101 suggests only 2 relays
which are best located adjacent to the busses
and fat-wires they control. Pilot management of those
relays is through two switches and itty-bitty wires
remotely located on the panel.

Quote:
Consider the advantages and disadvantages. If the relay fails, can you continue to fly safely?

This is called FAILURE MODE EFFECTS ANALYSIS (FMEA
for short). It's a process that should be artfully applied
to everything you do to configure and install your
electrical system. Everything from bolting a
Garmin G10000 to the panel down to crimping a
terminal on a wire.

(1) What are the ways this feature can fail?

(2) How will that failure affect ability of
the FLIGHT SYSTEM (pilot, airframe, circumstance)
ability to comfortably terminate the flight?

(3) How will I know failure has occurred?

(4) Is that failure pre-flight detectable?
(if so, put it on the check-list).

(5) If loss of that feature has a deleterious
effect under (2), what is your Plan-B
for mitigating the loss and having an exciting
tale to tell the grandchildren?

I have often referred readers to my personal
vaccination against the dreaded Dark Panel Syndrome:

https://tinyurl.com/4xjhgly

As a consistent renter of airplanes from a
relatively diverse fleet, taking a personal approach
to FMEA and preventative maintenance was a
bit impractical. But with those three items
in my flight bag (along with an AFD), my
chances of getting on the ground comfortably
even assuming total electrical system failure were
pretty good.

Your own recipe to comfortable arrivals with
the earth need not be so Spartan. But they
can be quite simple and BUILT IN to your
ship's architecture. Z101 offers multiple-source,
dual-path conduits of energy to various classes
of appliance. The likelihood of total loss
of any appliance is driven more by craftsmanship
than failure of a component . . . near zero.

Z101 switching philosophy covers all
keep-it-lit-and-turning options with
at most 3 and possibly 2 toggle switches.
The only radical in flight risk is to
switch them all OFF . . . and having them
all ON represents no particular hazard.







Bob . . .

Un impeachable logic: George Carlin asked, "If black boxes
survive crashes, why don't they make the whole airplane
out of that stuff?"


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 20, 2022 2:37 pm    Post subject: Re: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

Thanks for your input on multiple back up batteries.

I am installing one main battery with no backups. Z101 has good FMEA that will minimize risk and cost of ownership. Backup Batteries have risk that rise over time and cost. The SD-8 alternator is light weight, reliable, requires no annual maintenance and is in my inventory.


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 20, 2022 2:37 pm    Post subject: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

Quote:
Ref FAR 23.1361 "Master Switch Arrangement". FAR 23.1361 calls for protective device of 5A or less

That goes to crash-safety. The rational is that an
always hot wire soft-faulted as a result of mashing your
airplane into a wad is less likely to start
a fire if it's protected at 5A or less. This
idea is a bit specios . . . give me a cup of
gasoline, a battery, a 5a breaker and a hunk
of wire and I can start fires all day.

That 5A number was pulled from somewhere the sun
don't shine . . . but when you think about it,
there ARE certain needs for always hot wires
that HAD to be protected as SOME level . . . okay,
how about 5A?

But that assertion doesn't speak to the huge
differences in performance between fuses and
circuit breakers. Fuses are MUCH faster than
fuses. See:

https://tinyurl.com/muefe6s4

The demo only loaded the protective devices to
2 times rated. Presumably, a hard-fault to a
battery fed wire will be much stronger causing
faster operation. The likelihood of a dribbling
of fuel in the same time frame as the hard-fault
is very low if not impossible. A soft-fault is
another matter. The worry is for a dangling
remnant of a protected but always hot circuit making
intermittent contact with 'ground' for significant
periods of time. Time that allows compromised
fuel containment to spread about.

But as you saw in the video above, a soft-fault
(intermittent sparking) cannot be guaranteed
'fire safe' at any size of protective device
. . . so fooey, let's call it 5A and
forge ahead.

Quote:
Bob Nuckolls' advice is to allow 7-1/2 A fuses since fuses are faster than
breakers, that's why the largest fuse you see on the battery bus in Z schematics is 7-1/2A.

Yeah, but if you really, Really, REALLY needed
a 10A always-hot circuit, go ahead with the
fuse.

Quote:
BTW, fuses are normally sized (max load) / (0.75) = fuse rating.
Max load on a 7-1/2A fuse should be 5.6A.

Excellent point . . . but that assumes a 'gentle'
load (mostly resistive, little or no inrush).
The disadvantage of fuses is that they can be
'hammered' by short but repetitive transient
above their nameplate rating. The N811HB
accident

https://tinyurl.com/3h8vb3aj

was the result of fuse operations delayed for
HOURS of normal operations sprinkled
with transient excursions into a range
of currents that 'soften' the fuse element.

This hammering causes a slow DEPRESSION
of the fuse's operating current. N811HB had
to hammer TWO fuses events where the second
precipitating rough arrival with the rocks.

Quote:
As you can see, a 23A MIDI fuse does not meet FAR23.1361. Also it is
considered bad practice to put two fuses in series even though the 10A
fuses on your aux bus are smaller than a MIDI 23.

I sort wish that there was a different symbol
for fusible links vs. fuses. Fusible links are
so very slow that they can be reliably incorporated
to protect fat-wire feeders to bus bars that
distribute power to downstream arrays of breakers or
fuses.

The MIDI devices are not generally used as
protection to appliance feeders. They are
robust and slow like the legacy ANL current
limiters. See:

https://tinyurl.com/pm54y2ye

Note that a MIDI30 will carry 40 amps almost
forever, 60A for about 8 seconds, 200A for
200 mS. This device could be used to protect
the fat-wire supplying a bus with a 5A breaker
feeding a crowbar ov management module. Typical
crowbar currents are on the order of 200A. A
5A breaker opens in about 10 mS, 20x faster than
any MIDI device protecting that bus upstream.

But then, MIDI devices are kinda clumsy in that
they need holders and hardware to mount them.
a 10AWG feeder with a 14AWG fusible link wire
would be a fine alternative to a MIDI30 limiter.

Quote:
As mentioned, FAR 23.1361 is for fire-in-the-cockpit and
off-field landing scenarios but it's also for service scenario,
that's why auto service manuals say first thing disconnect
the battery negative terminal.

Good idea . . . watched a very well done youtube
presentation by a fellow that was taking lots
of wires loose and laying tools on top of his
battery with all the fat-wires still hooked up.
I'm assuming he edited out the scene with
sparks and smoke . . .


Bob . . .

Un impeachable logic: George Carlin asked, "If black boxes
survive crashes, why don't they make the whole airplane
out of that stuff?"


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 20, 2022 8:36 pm    Post subject: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

At 04:37 PM 11/20/2022, you wrote:
Quote:
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "bcone1381" <bcone1964(at)gmail.com>

Thanks for your input on multiple back up batteries.

I am installing one main battery with no backups.

Tell us also that you plan periodic capacity
checks along with a "replace at less-than-xx-percent"
maintenance philosophy.

Most light aircraft batteries get replaced
when they don't crank the engine any more.
By this time, capacity is probably much
smaller than a practical, battery-only endurance
mark.

In 50+ years of reading 'dark-n-stormy-night'
tales in the aviation rags, I cannot recall
a single narrative where the writer cites
battery failure in spite of satisfactory,
periodic maintenance tests.

Batteries are a commodity. Like tires,
oil, fuel, alternator belts, etc. they
are CONSUMED starting at hour-one. Avoid
your own dark-n-stormy night story by
not consuming past hour-too-many.


Bob . . .

Un impeachable logic: George Carlin asked, "If black boxes
survive crashes, why don't they make the whole airplane
out of that stuff?"


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PostPosted: Tue Nov 22, 2022 1:47 pm    Post subject: Re: Final Elect. System Review Reply with quote

Bob;

Battery Condition will be checked every annual with a Lawn Mower destination when 80% capacity is reached. I believe that is an Industry Best Practice.

Fusible Link Question. You have a Cartoon titled "How to Fabricate Fusible Links." In block one you say

THIS TECHNIQUE IS SUITED FOR 24 AND 22AWG FUSE LINKS ONLY (USE
TO PROTECT 20 AND 8AW G WIRES RESEPCTIVELY). CONTACT US FOR
SITUATIONS WHERE YOU MAY NEED LARGER FUSE LINKS.

What should I know about a 14 AWG fusible Link?

NOTE OF GRATITUDE:
I cant tell you how much I appreciated your reply. My concerns include fear that I will build in a hidden failure point, or a single point of failure like N811HB. A few days ago I stated reviewing past archive of my questions dating back 5 years to fabricate a list of industry best practices. I'm humbled at your patience and a lot of time with me on this forum. More than I deserve.


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