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noisy tach signal

 
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chris_hand(at)comcast.net
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PostPosted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 11:00 pm    Post subject: noisy tach signal Reply with quote

I'm having a lot of trouble getting a good tach reading on my IK-2000 engine
monitor using a Hall effect sensor on a Slick mag and am looking for
suggestions on what to try next. I've tried multiple different wiring
routings and tried 0.1 uF capacitor between signal lead and ground as well
as between +5V power lead and ground, with no success (problem actually got
worse when I added the caps so I took them back out).

History is that I initially had dual P-mag setup with tach sensor reading
off right P-mag. Tach worked fine in that configuration. At about 26 hours
total time I replaced the left P-mag with an impulse coupled Slick mag,
still taking tach signal off right side P-mag. In that configuration I had
noise issues causing problems with the tach reading at power settings below
about 1800 rpm (engine / prop combo is O-360, fixed pitch Sensenich). The
issue only showed up on throttling back when in flight; didn't see it on the
ground except after landing when I had the problem in flight. Those tach
problems were resolved by tying the Slick mag p-lead up a little further
away from the tach sensor leads (although they were already seperated by at
least 6 or 8 inches at closest approach).

This past weekend I changed out the right side P-mag for non-impulse coupled
Slick mag and installed a Hall effect sensor in the mag vent hole for
feeding the IK-2000 tach sensor lines. This was the sensor suggested by
IK-Technologies. Ground testing shows good tach readings only at rpms
above about 1000-1200 rpm but after 10 or 15 minutes of flight time it
starts reading low and erratic at power settings below about 2000 rpm,
becoming completely unusable at approach and idle power settings. If I
secure the right mag at any time (ground or in-flight testing), the tach
reading is steady and appears accurate. So the noise is being introduced by
the right mag when it is operating, but with the mag not firing, the sensor
installed on that mag works great.

I am using the factory supplied sensor wiring harness, which uses twisted
pair wiring with none of the leads being shielded. I had extra lengths in
this harness when I installed it so have the extra length coiled up under
the forward top skin. For lack of any other ideas, I'm thinking about
removing the factory harness and building a new one using 3-wire shielded
cable for the tach sensor lines.

Has anybody else on the list run into tach signal noise issues when using
standard mags with Hall effect sensor? Any suggestions on what else I can
do to fix this? (aside from going to a different sensor type or stand-alone
tachometer)

Thanks in advance for any suggestions!

Chris
RV-6A, N731CK, 55 hrs


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chris_hand(at)comcast.net
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 16, 2009 10:44 pm    Post subject: noisy tach signal Reply with quote

I have been unable to solve this problem so far and am considering a
different tach sensor or even buying / installing a stand-alone tach as I'm
getting frustrated in trying to get the IK-2000 engine monitor tach to work
with the factory recommended sensor. If anyone has any suggestions on what
I'm missing in making this work, any input is appreciated.

Here's where I'm at right now:

1. I cut the Hall effect sensor factory harness as short as I could for
installing connectors and used a 3-wire shielded cable from there to aft of
the firewall to connect the Hall effect sensor power, signal, and ground
wires. I soldered a short ground wire to the shield at the sensor end of
the cable and grounded it via ring terminal at the same mag location that I
grounded the p-lead shield. No improvement - in fact, probably worse than
without the shielded cable.

2. I moved the Hall effect sensor from the right mag to the left mag to see
if the same noise issue was observed and to see if the problem moved with
the sensor to the other mag. The problem DID move to the other mag and was
identical in performance (or lack thereof). So the Hall effect sensor gives
good rpm indication on the IK-2000 as long as the mag it is installed in is
NOT operating. As soon as I move the p-lead switch to "On" for the mag the
sensor is installed on, the tach signal becomes unusable. At low rpm (below
about 2000 rpm), the signal usually reads as if no signal is being recieved
(reads 20 or 30 rpm, same as when IK-2000 energized with engine off). At
high power settings, the tach indication bounces between reading correct to
being 100 to 300 rpm low and the number changes frequently even with
constant actual engine rpm. One interesting note is that the tach reading
is more accurate, i.e. less noise, when the engine is first started and run
from being cold (ambient temp). On initial (cold) startup, I start getting
good tach indication at about 1200 to 1500 rpm, allowing normal runup and
takeoff, and at cruise power settings everything looks good with the tach.
After shutdown and subsequent restart following initial flight of the day, I
don't get a good, or even close, reading until power goes above about 2000
rpm. After warmup in flight, tach indication is jumpy and reads low even at
2200 to 2300 rpm power settings. At any time, I can get a solid and
apparently accurate tach reading by securing the mag that has the Hall
effect sensor installed (I make the "apparently accurate" statement based on
past operating conditions: throttle position, sound, and airspeed/fuel flow
performance data, and the fact that the reading goes back to steady, solid
reading vice jumping around, and the idle readings are where they
should/have been).

3. As mentioned below, I tried installing 0.1 uF capacitor between
signal/gnd with no improvement. Same for installing 0.1 uF b/w +5V and gnd.
Whatever noise is being induced is driving the tach signal to point of no
pulses detected when the mag with sensor installed is operating. I can't
physically seperate the sensor line from the mag or the p-lead any more than
I already have.

Has anybody had success with the Westach Hall effect sensor installed in a
Slick mag? Anybody using this combination with an IK-Technologies engine
monitor? If so on either, did you encounter any noise issues that had to be
overcome?

Any advice/help is appreciated.
Thanks,
Chris
RV-6A, N731CK
---


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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Wed Jun 17, 2009 11:41 am    Post subject: noisy tach signal Reply with quote

At 01:41 AM 6/17/2009, you wrote:
Quote:


I have been unable to solve this problem so far and am considering a
different tach sensor or even buying / installing a stand-alone tach
as I'm getting frustrated in trying to get the IK-2000 engine
monitor tach to work with the factory recommended sensor. If anyone
has any suggestions on what I'm missing in making this work, any
input is appreciated.

Here's where I'm at right now:

1. I cut the Hall effect sensor factory harness as short as I could
for installing connectors and used a 3-wire shielded cable from
there to aft of the firewall to connect the Hall effect sensor
power, signal, and ground wires. I soldered a short ground wire to
the shield at the sensor end of the cable and grounded it via ring
terminal at the same mag location that I grounded the p-lead
shield. No improvement - in fact, probably worse than without the
shielded cable.

<snip>

Clearly your hall sensor is responding to "ringing"
in the magnetic circuit associated with the points-
opening event of the magneto. Have you used a 'scope
to see what's showing up on the tach signal when
the magneto is operating? The tach signal is quite
low in frequency so some form of low-pass filter
and/or other signal conditioning is indicated.
Unfortunately, the expected signal from a hard
switching hall effect sensor is already full of
high frequency components (cause it's square).
Rolling this off to get rid of the ringing spikes
will probably require re-squaring the signal after
low-pass to get tach input happy.

In the past, I've use phase locked loops to grab
the desired suite of low frequency components that
basically ignores the spikes. What is the sensor
brand and part number?
Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
( )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------


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chris_hand(at)comcast.net
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PostPosted: Wed Jun 17, 2009 1:13 pm    Post subject: noisy tach signal Reply with quote

Thanks Bob. I don't have access to an o-scope so haven't been able to look
at the signal. The only filtering I've tried is the simple wiring of a 0.1
uF cap from signal lead to ground. My other efforts at solving the problem
have been trying various wiring routing changes and then changing the sensor
leads to shielded cable.

The sensor is a Westach Model 720-14R Hall effect sensor that screws into
the Slick mag vent hole over the rotating magnets. Westach has been very
responsive in trying to help solve the issue but no luck so far. They are
going to send me a sensor that is driven off the mechanical drive (model
303DH2T) and I'll see if that works better, but they tell me the setup I
have has worked for many others and I'm not sure what in my setup could be
causing the problem. I haven't heard back from IK-Tech yet.

Chris

Quote:

<nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com>

<snip>

Clearly your hall sensor is responding to "ringing"
in the magnetic circuit associated with the points-
opening event of the magneto. Have you used a 'scope
to see what's showing up on the tach signal when
the magneto is operating? The tach signal is quite
low in frequency so some form of low-pass filter
and/or other signal conditioning is indicated.
Unfortunately, the expected signal from a hard
switching hall effect sensor is already full of
high frequency components (cause it's square).
Rolling this off to get rid of the ringing spikes
will probably require re-squaring the signal after
low-pass to get tach input happy.

In the past, I've use phase locked loops to grab
the desired suite of low frequency components that
basically ignores the spikes. What is the sensor
brand and part number?
Bob . . .


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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Thu Jun 18, 2009 4:00 am    Post subject: noisy tach signal Reply with quote

At 04:12 PM 6/17/2009, you wrote:
Quote:


Thanks Bob. I don't have access to an o-scope so haven't been able
to look at the signal. The only filtering I've tried is the simple
wiring of a 0.1 uF cap from signal lead to ground. My other efforts
at solving the problem have been trying various wiring routing
changes and then changing the sensor leads to shielded cable.

The sensor is a Westach Model 720-14R Hall effect sensor that screws
into the Slick mag vent hole over the rotating magnets. Westach has
been very responsive in trying to help solve the issue but no luck
so far. They are going to send me a sensor that is driven off the
mechanical drive (model 303DH2T) and I'll see if that works better,
but they tell me the setup I have has worked for many others and I'm
not sure what in my setup could be causing the problem. I haven't
heard back from IK-Tech yet.

Hmmm . . . see if the IK-Tech will share a sketch
of a schematic for the first two stages of tach
signal conditioning. The manner in which bias levels
are established for any "squaring" or level sensing
circuits can have a profound effect on noise sensitivity.
The schematics (need parts values too) + 'scope trace
will permit a simple-ideas analysis of the symptoms.
Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
( )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------


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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Thu Jun 18, 2009 5:45 pm    Post subject: noisy tach signal Reply with quote

At 04:12 PM 6/17/2009, you wrote:
Quote:


Thanks Bob. I don't have access to an o-scope so haven't been able
to look at the signal. The only filtering I've tried is the simple
wiring of a 0.1 uF cap from signal lead to ground. My other efforts
at solving the problem have been trying various wiring routing
changes and then changing the sensor leads to shielded cable.

The sensor is a Westach Model 720-14R Hall effect sensor that screws
into the Slick mag vent hole over the rotating magnets. Westach has
been very responsive in trying to help solve the issue but no luck
so far. They are going to send me a sensor that is driven off the
mechanical drive (model 303DH2T) and I'll see if that works better,
but they tell me the setup I have has worked for many others and I'm
not sure what in my setup could be causing the problem. I haven't
heard back from IK-Tech yet.

Hmmm . . . see if the IK-Tech will share a sketch
of a schematic for the first two stages of tach
signal conditioning. The manner in which bias levels
are established for any "squaring" or level sensing
circuits can have a profound effect on noise sensitivity.
The schematics (need parts values too) + 'scope trace
will permit a simple-ideas analysis of the symptoms.
Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
( )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------


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chris_hand(at)comcast.net
Guest





PostPosted: Sat Jun 20, 2009 11:36 pm    Post subject: noisy tach signal Reply with quote

Thanks Bob, fortunately it appears there was a simple solution that will
avoid troubleshooting efforts at the circuit level.....it appears the
720-14R hall effect sender I had installed was defective as I replaced it
with a new one this evening and after a ground run and short test flight,
everything seems to be working normally now.

Westach has been very good about helping me with this issue on getting their
sender to work with the IK unit and they sent me several sender types to
try, including a new replacement for what I was using. Excellent customer
service and tech support from Westach.
I didn't get to the point of using the other sender options they sent as the
first thing I did was try the straight replacement for what I had. So my
lesson learned is that yes, sometimes a brand new sensor/sender can be bad
right out of the box. What I don't understand is how a defective hall
effect sender would cause indications of noise issues when the mag it's
installed in is running but work normally when that mag is secured.....but
I've got a working tach now, so I'm happy!

Chris

Quote:

<nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com>
Hmmm . . . see if the IK-Tech will share a sketch
of a schematic for the first two stages of tach
signal conditioning. The manner in which bias levels
are established for any "squaring" or level sensing
circuits can have a profound effect on noise sensitivity.
The schematics (need parts values too) + 'scope trace
will permit a simple-ideas analysis of the symptoms.
Bob . . .


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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Sun Jun 21, 2009 10:23 am    Post subject: noisy tach signal Reply with quote

At 02:32 AM 6/21/2009, you wrote:
Quote:


Thanks Bob, fortunately it appears there was a simple solution that
will avoid troubleshooting efforts at the circuit level.....it
appears the 720-14R hall effect sender I had installed was defective
as I replaced it with a new one this evening and after a ground run
and short test flight, everything seems to be working normally now.

<snip>
Great! It would have been interesting to see
if a 'scope investigation would have revealed
the problem too . . . but I'm pleased to hear
that you can move on to more important things!
Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( . . . a long habit of not thinking )
( a thing wrong, gives it a superficial )
( appearance of being right . . . )
( )
( -Thomas Paine 1776- )
---------------------------------------


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