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Hall Effect Sensor Installation

 
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TJPackard



Joined: 16 Dec 2008
Posts: 2

PostPosted: Tue Dec 16, 2008 7:45 am    Post subject: Hall Effect Sensor Installation Reply with quote

GRT's EIS has a Hall Effect sensor that can be used to sense battery current or Alternator output. Which is the preferred installation,and what are the pros/cons of either one.
TJ


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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 16, 2008 8:16 am    Post subject: Hall Effect Sensor Installation Reply with quote

At 09:45 AM 12/16/2008, you wrote:
Quote:


GRT's EIS has a Hall Effect sensor that can be used to sense battery
current or Alternator output. Which is the preferred
installation,and what are the pros/cons of either one.
TJ

Ammeters have virtually no useful purpose as a flight
systems management device. They're mostly useful for
diagnostics . . . something that should be accomplished
on the ground. The choice for architecture is not
a very critical consideration. It's only important that
you understand the significance of the readings offered
at the location you choose. Cessnas favored battery
ammeters for years, everyone else liked alternator
load meters. Either one performs a useful duty.
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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longg(at)pjm.com
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 16, 2008 8:54 am    Post subject: Hall Effect Sensor Installation Reply with quote

Speaking of Hall Effect stuff, I just purchased two LightSpeed III hall
effect ignition modules. The mfg says to connect the + side of the
controller through a pull-able breaker then directly to the battery
terminal. Ok, that covers their insurance folks if I crash. On the other
hand I am using Z-13 and was thinking of using the same scenario but
connecting them to the main battery bus using an ATC fuse and skipping
the breaker. I was never a proponent of having extra wires hanging off
the + side of the battery terminal. AS in Z-13 I will have a switch to
turn them on/off as necessary.

Has anyone wired up two of these and which method did you use.

Glenn

--


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klehman(at)albedo.net
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 16, 2008 10:01 am    Post subject: Hall Effect Sensor Installation Reply with quote

It's a bit of a stretch but in some circumstances a loadmeter can be
useful for discovering a problem:
-did the boost pump really start?
-are all the nav lights on or is a bulb burned out?
-I smell something odd, is something drawing excess current?

Ken

Robert L. Nuckolls, III wrote:
Quote:

<nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelectric.com>

At 09:45 AM 12/16/2008, you wrote:
>
> <tjpackard(at)yahoo.com>
>
> GRT's EIS has a Hall Effect sensor that can be used to sense battery
> current or Alternator output. Which is the preferred installation,and
> what are the pros/cons of either one.
> TJ

Ammeters have virtually no useful purpose as a flight
systems management device. They're mostly useful for
diagnostics . . . something that should be accomplished
on the ground. The choice for architecture is not
a very critical consideration. It's only important that
you understand the significance of the readings offered
at the location you choose. Cessnas favored battery
ammeters for years, everyone else liked alternator
load meters. Either one performs a useful duty.


Bob . . .


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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 16, 2008 12:14 pm    Post subject: Hall Effect Sensor Installation Reply with quote

At 11:59 AM 12/16/2008, you wrote:
Quote:


It's a bit of a stretch but in some circumstances a loadmeter can be
useful for discovering a problem:
-did the boost pump really start?
-are all the nav lights on or is a bulb burned out?
-I smell something odd, is something drawing excess current?

Point well taken . . . and I'll admit that my
earlier comments were made while visions of
what has passed for "electrical instrumentation"
in years gone by were foremost in my thoughts . . .

http://aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Instruments/bat_ammeter.jpg

http://aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Instruments/loadmeter.jpg

You're quite right that if your current measuring device
has the necessary resolution, it COULD be used for
in-flight or pre-flight validations as suggested.

However, if one has LED position lights, detecting
one malfunctioning fixture out of three may still be
problematic. I think if I had an engine that needed
actively pumped source of fuel, a fuel pressure gage
would be part of the instrumentation too. If I smelled
smoke, this gray-haired ol' sniffer of many failures
could decide if it was petroleum fed or some tortured
electrical component.

If a builder understands what the instrument is
capable of showing and finds it's useful to build
it into checklists then by all means. The digital
displays offer the most promise for such utility.
I've never flown behind digital displays of current
so I'll beg some indulgence for the 20 year old
thought processes. Thanks for rattling the cage!

Bob . . .


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currydon(at)bellsouth.net
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 16, 2008 2:56 pm    Post subject: Hall Effect Sensor Installation Reply with quote



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ainut(at)hiwaay.net
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 16, 2008 4:35 pm    Post subject: Hall Effect Sensor Installation Reply with quote



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marcausman



Joined: 08 Feb 2007
Posts: 70

PostPosted: Wed Dec 17, 2008 9:49 am    Post subject: Re: Hall Effect Sensor Installation Reply with quote

There is another option to consider that is offered by Vertical Power. The system measures the current drawn by each individual electrical device. It then sums each of the devices and presents the total aircraft current draw on the graphic of the electrical system. So you can see the overall current draw, as well as drill down and see individual device current draw.

IMO, such features are becoming more and more important as aircraft become more and more electrically dependent.

As Bob stated, this is best used for troubleshooting, and during normal operations is nice to see just to verify that everything is drawing the right amount of current. The system (upcoming feature) can also generate a "current fault" alert, which lets you know instantaneously when something is not drawing current that should be drawing current (like landing light, nav lights, pitot heat, etc.).

It also means you don't have to install shunts or hall effect sensors. It's all built into the control unit.


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Marc Ausman
http://www.verticalpower.com "Move up to a modern electrical system"
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Speedy11(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Wed Dec 17, 2008 7:08 pm    Post subject: Hall Effect Sensor Installation Reply with quote

Ken,
Congratulations. You are the first to obtain a less than antagonistic response on this subject. Perhaps moderate aging mellows us.
It is not a stretch at all to find amps a valuable bit of info while airborne.
Stan
Do not archive

Quote:
>It's a bit of a stretch but in some circumstances a loadmeter can be
Quote:
useful for discovering a problem:
-did the boost pump really start?
-are all the nav lights on or is a bulb burned out?
-I smell something odd, is something drawing excess current?

  Point well taken . . . and I'll admit that my
earlier comments were made while visions of
what has passed for "electrical instrumentation"
in years gone by were foremost in my thoughts . . .

http://aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Instruments/bat_ammeter.jpg

http://aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Instruments/loadmeter.jpg

  You're quite right that if your current measuring device
has the necessary resolution, it COULD be used for
in-flight or pre-flight validations as suggested.

However, if one has LED position lights, detecting
one malfunctioning fixture out of three may still be
problematic. I think if I had an engine that needed
actively pumped source of fuel, a fuel pressure gage
would be part of the instrumentation too. If I smelled
smoke, this gray-haired ol' sniffer of many failures
could decide if it was petroleum fed or some tortured
electrical component.

If a builder understands what the instrument is
capable of showing and finds it's useful to build
it into checklists then by all means. The digital
displays offer the most promise for such utility.
I've never flown behind digital displays of current
so I'll beg some indulgence for the 20 year old
thought processes. Thanks for rattling the cage!

Bob




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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 18, 2008 6:58 am    Post subject: Hall Effect Sensor Installation Reply with quote

At 09:07 PM 12/17/2008, you wrote:
Quote:
Ken,
Congratulations. You are the first to obtain a less than antagonistic response on this subject. Perhaps moderate aging mellows us.
It is not a stretch at all to find amps a valuable bit of info while airborne.
Stan

I don't take pleasure in poking sticks
at people. What have I said about ammeters
that you interpreted as antagonistic?


Bob . . .

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

[quote][b]


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