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s_kilishek(at)yahoo.com Guest
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Posted: Fri Dec 29, 2006 10:22 am Post subject: What Are The Odds |
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Chuck:
Good question.
I'm an getting overvoltage light from the annunciator
panel, which uses one sensor to pick up buss voltage,
and getting a digital voltage readout from a separate
sensor on the EMS. Both concur on the overvoltage.
In terms of wiring, I think the following is true:
We're getting 12 volts to the regulator and the
connection from the regulator to the field terminal
is sound (since the alternator is charging).
The OVM-14 overvoltage device is working (alternator
cuts off when voltage goes over 15 volts).
I can't tell whether the regulator is not regulating
or is regulating at >15 volts.
George
Chuck Jensen wrote:
Are you measuring the voltage with a minimum of
two different
instruments? In short, are you sure it is the
voltage and not the
measuring device/indication?
Chuck Jensen
--
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nuckollsr(at)cox.net Guest
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Posted: Fri Dec 29, 2006 9:24 pm Post subject: What Are The Odds |
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At 10:16 AM 12/29/2006 -0800, you wrote:
Quote: |
Chuck:
Good question.
I'm an getting overvoltage light from the annunciator
panel, which uses one sensor to pick up buss voltage,
and getting a digital voltage readout from a separate
sensor on the EMS. Both concur on the overvoltage.
In terms of wiring, I think the following is true:
We're getting 12 volts to the regulator and the
connection from the regulator to the field terminal
is sound (since the alternator is charging).
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"Getting 12 volts" is not especially definitive. Do
the specific votlage measurement cited below . . .
Quote: | The OVM-14 overvoltage device is working (alternator
cuts off when voltage goes over 15 volts).
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How does it "cut off"? The OVM-14 is supposed to trip
the field supply breaker. If the breaker does not trip,
the OVM-14 is not a part of this trouble-shooting
task . . .
Quote: | I can't tell whether the regulator is not regulating
or is regulating at >15 volts.
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Easy. Use a voltmeter to measure between the A/S terminals
and regulator case. THIS is the point where the regulator
believes it is seeing bus voltage. You may find that it
it sitting happily at 14.2 volts while voltage
drops in wiring BETWEEN the A/S terminals and the BUS
are cause for an artificially raising of regulation set-point.
Take one of your regulators and install some short leads
on it as illustrated below. Install right on the back of
the alternator and see what the bus voltage does while
the engine is running and you vary loads by turning things
on and off. These experiments totally bypass all other
ship's wiring.
http://www.aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Regulators/Alternator_Test_1.jpg
http://www.aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Regulators/Ford_Test_Reg.jpg
I think you'll find that the alternator and regulator
are fine . . . there's some bug in installation.
Conduct the experiments cited above and report back the
results. We can begin to divide the probabilities-list into
manageable partitions.
Bob . . .
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