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		ChangDriver
 
 
  Joined: 15 Sep 2007 Posts: 266
 
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				 Posted: Mon May 11, 2009 10:11 am    Post subject: Battery Charger as Ground Power | 
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				Bob:
 
 I've been reading some posts on ground power and noted that some people are using a battery charger as a ground power unit.  From what I remember about the output voltage of almost all battery chargers, there is a significant potential to overvoltage the aircraft isn't there?  The voltage from most chargers is not filtered and is not as clean as you'd want for powering avionics, etc.
 
 Am I right,
 
 Craig
 
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		woxofswa
 
 
  Joined: 12 Aug 2008 Posts: 349 Location: AZ
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				 Posted: Mon May 11, 2009 10:22 am    Post subject: Re: Battery Charger as Ground Power | 
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				I'm no expert, but I think you are right.
 
 I think a  12.5 volt "maintainer" would make much more sense.  They can be had at Harbor Freight for $5
 
 For ground tests and assembly, I plan on using a cheapo lawn tractor battery with a maintainer hooked up to it.  The battery would then serve as a sink if there is a problem with the maintainer.
 
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 _________________ Myron Nelson
 
Mesa, AZ
 
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		nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon May 11, 2009 1:00 pm    Post subject: Battery Charger as Ground Power | 
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				At 01:11 PM 5/11/2009, you wrote:
   	  | Quote: | 	 		  --> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "Craig Winkelmann" <capav8r(at)gmail.com>
 
  Bob:
 
  I've been reading some posts on ground power and noted that some people are using a battery charger as a ground power unit.  From what I remember about the output voltage of almost all battery chargers, there is a significant potential to overvoltage the aircraft isn't there?  The voltage from most chargers is not filtered and is not as clean as you'd want for powering avionics, etc. | 	  
     "Battery Charger" is non-qualified. Technically, any
     source of energy that is capable of reversing current
     flow into a battery is a 'charger'.
 
     The quality of output power from chargers can be all
     over the map.  The very first charger I owned was a
     6v Tungar rectifier electro-whizzy. 
 
  [img]cid:.0[/img]
 
     The output quality of this thing would have been
     REALLY noisy, ZERO voltage regulation, hideously
     inefficient, but entirely suited to keeping my '41
     Pontiac straight-6 ready to start on a cold morning.
 
     By the way, anyone interested in exploring/reliving
     some of the history of lead-acid battery technology,
     feel free to download this item. (Caution 9+ MB)
 
   http://tinyurl.com/owad89 
 
     45 years later and at the other end of the spectrum,
     we can purchase light, relatively inexpensive, high
     quality switch-mode power supplies that will serve as
     both ground power supplies for system operations but
     battery chargers as well.
 
     Unfortunately, devices tailored to serve as "smart"
     chargers (quick recharge, indefinite storage) probably
     don't make good ground power supplies because their
     internal battery-pampering software gets confused when
     the "battery" being maintained keeps changing terminal
     voltage and load.
 
     A few years ago, we made a great buy on a quantity
     of Samlex 1223 power supplies. 
 
   http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/hamps/2423.html
 
     We offered these as "alternator simulators" with the
     suggestion that they could be used to make the ship's
     systems believe that a 23A alternator was running.
     This would allow the ship's battery to be charged
     and ship's systems of up to 20A draw (about anything
     but pitot heat) to be tested in the shop.
 
     The short answer is that not all battery chargers
     are suited for use as ground power supplies perhaps
     due to their particular noise/voltage-regulation
     characteristics. However, you can hook any charger
     across a battery and give it a try. Make sure you
     know how it behaves in the long term (watch bus
     voltage) and know it's specific limits. With
     a modicum of due-diligence, the experiment offers
     minimal risk to system components.
 
  
         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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		Matt Dralle Site Admin
  
  Joined: 08 Nov 2005 Posts: 26477 Location: Livermore CA USA
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				 Posted: Mon May 11, 2009 2:33 pm    Post subject: Battery Charger as Ground Power | 
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				At 01:58 PM 5/11/2009  Monday, you wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  At 01:11 PM 5/11/2009, you wrote:
 >
 >
 >Bob:
 >
 >I've been reading some posts on ground power and noted that some people are using a battery charger as a ground power unit.  From what I remember about the output voltage of almost all battery chargers, there is a significant potential to overvoltage the aircraft isn't there?  The voltage from most chargers is not filtered and is not as clean as you'd want for powering avionics, etc.
 
    Unfortunately, devices tailored to serve as "smart"
    chargers (quick recharge, indefinite storage) probably
    don't make good ground power supplies because their
    internal battery-pampering software gets confused when
    the "battery" being maintained keeps changing terminal
    voltage and load.
 
    A few years ago, we made a great buy on a quantity
    of Samlex 1223 power supplies. 
 
        Bob . . .
 
 | 	  
 
 I've got one of these Black and Decker BC40EB units that has adjustable charge output limits in addition to a 110amp starter booster.  I'm plugging it into my GPU plug and use it to run the avionics, charge the battery, and I'm hoping eventually to jump start the engine when the battery is on the low side.  The only downside seems to be that the unit has to see 4-5volts on the "battery" before it will turn on its output.  This means that it won't flip the GPU relay and you have to have an external switch to do that.
 
 Bob, does this seem like a good charger/GPU product for aircraft systems?
 
         http://www.blackanddecker.com/ProductGuide/Product-Details.aspx?ProductID=17925
 
 Matt Dralle
 RV-8 #82880 N998RV
 Carpet CAD Drawings...
 (1200+ Hours Build Time...)
 
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		skywagon
 
 
  Joined: 11 Feb 2006 Posts: 184
 
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				 Posted: Mon May 11, 2009 5:43 pm    Post subject: Battery Charger as Ground Power | 
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				The little, cheap Harbor Freight "maintainers" work quite well.  I have used several.  One key point however,  ...many of them come set a tad too high in their fixed "float" voltage, to my thinking.  I have seen them as high as 13.9 v. 
 
 The good news, is they can be adjusted to the float voltage that you want.  The little controller box should have a back lid that is lightly glued in place.  Carefully work a very narrow blade screw driver or other tough, but thin device into the glued seam and work it until the back pops off.  Inside is a small circuit board and potentiometer.  It may have a spot of RTV on it. Work this loose.  Turning the pot CW lowers to float voltage.  I like about 13.2 v.  Others may want a slightly different setting.  I usually locate where the pot slotted screw adjust hole is located next to the little case and drill a 3/16 hole.  That way, it can be adjusted from the outside.  The little unit is quite stable after you get the setting where you want it. David
 ---- woxofswa <woxof(at)aol.com> wrote: 
 
 =============
  
 I'm no expert, but I think you are right.
 
 I think a  12.5 volt "maintainer" would make much more sense.  They can be had at Harbor Freight for $5
 
 For ground tests and assembly, I plan on using a cheapo lawn tractor battery with a maintainer hooked up to it.  The battery would then serve as a sink if there is a problem with the maintainer.
 
 --------
 Myron Nelson
 Mesa, AZ
 Emp completed, legacy build fuse in progress
 
 
 Read this topic online here:
 
 http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p 43569#243569
 
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		ChangDriver
 
 
  Joined: 15 Sep 2007 Posts: 266
 
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				 Posted: Mon May 11, 2009 6:13 pm    Post subject: Re: Battery Charger as Ground Power | 
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				Bob:
 
 Thanks, BUT some GPUs bypass the battery because they are not meant to be a port for charging the battery.  In these cases, whatever comes out of the charger goes on the main bus.  I suspect the right thing is to see how conditioned and stable the output voltage is prior to plugging the unit into a plane full of expensive avionics.
 
 Craig
 
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		nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon May 11, 2009 7:42 pm    Post subject: Battery Charger as Ground Power | 
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				 	  | Quote: | 	 		  I think a  12.5 volt "maintainer" would make much more sense.  They 
 can be had at Harbor Freight for $5
 
 For ground tests and assembly, I plan on using a cheapo lawn tractor 
 battery with a maintainer hooked up to it.  The battery would then 
 serve as a sink if there is a problem with the maintainer.
 
 | 	  
   Actually, the ideal maintainer voltage is just
   above 100-200 millivolts the battery's open circuit
   voltage 24 hours or so after taking it off the charger.
   Lead-Acid batteries, this is 13.1 to 13.2 volts.
 
   The idea is that you want to hold the battery at or
   just above it's own chemistry voltage . . . thus
   any and all tendencies to self-discharge are supported
   by the external energy source. I.e. self-discharge
   currents do not tax the chemistry. See:
 
 http://www.aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Curves/Battery_Tender_Recharge.pdf
 
 http://www.aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Curves/Ideal_Recharge_Protocol.jpg
 
         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 Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Mon May 11, 2009 7:44 pm    Post subject: Battery Charger as Ground Power | 
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				At 09:13 PM 5/11/2009, you wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  
 <capav8r(at)gmail.com>
 
 Bob:
 
 Thanks, BUT some GPUs bypass the battery because they are not meant 
 to be a port for charging the battery.  In these cases, whatever 
 comes out of the charger goes on the main bus.  I suspect the right 
 thing is to see how conditioned and stable the output voltage is 
 prior to plugging the unit into a plane full of expensive avionics.
 
 | 	  
    It's the system integrator's task to decide whether
    or not the battery is on line during ground power
    connection. I've heard the stories for both cases
    for BIG airplanes with BIG batteries and BIG ground
    power carts.
 
    For our purposes and considering relative sizes
    of our hardware, it's best to have a battery on
    line during ground power ops . . . especially
    if the power quality of the power source has not
    been fully qualified to the task.
         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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		icubob(at)gmail.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Tue May 12, 2009 3:11 am    Post subject: Battery Charger as Ground Power | 
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				i have 6 or 8 of these little chargers on all my toys. i have noticed on some some that the voltage was too low. i tried once to adjust the voltage but couldn't get anything to turn.i guess i will go back and try again to adjust the voltage on a couple that are too low. on the one that was too high i soldered a diode in line and dropped the voltage.
          bob noffs
 
 On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 8:31 PM, David L. <skywagon(at)charter.net (skywagon(at)charter.net)> wrote:
 [quote] --> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "David L." <skywagon(at)charter.net (skywagon(at)charter.net)>
  
  The little, cheap Harbor Freight "maintainers" work quite well.  I have used several.  One key point however,  ...many of them come set a tad too high in their fixed "float" voltage, to my thinking.  I have seen them as high as 13.9 v.
   
  The good news, is they can be adjusted to the float voltage that you want.  The little controller box should have a back lid that is lightly glued in place.  Carefully work a very narrow blade screw driver or other tough, but thin device into the glued seam and work it until the back pops off.  Inside is a small circuit board and potentiometer.  It may have a spot of RTV on it. Work this loose.  Turning the pot CW lowers to float voltage.  I like about 13.2 v.  Others may want a slightly different setting.  I usually locate where the pot slotted screw adjust hole is located next to the little case and drill a 3/16 hole.  That way, it can be adjusted from the outside.  The little unit is quite stable after you get the setting where you want it. David
   
  
  ---- woxofswa <woxof(at)aol.com (woxof(at)aol.com)> wrote:
  
  =============
  --> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "woxofswa" <woxof(at)aol.com (woxof(at)aol.com)>
  
  I'm no expert, but I think you are right.
  
  I think a  12.5 volt "maintainer" would make much more sense.  They can be had at Harbor Freight for $5
  
  For ground tests and assembly, I plan on using a cheapo lawn tractor battery with a maintainer hooked up to it.  The battery would then serve as a sink if there is a problem with the maintainer.
  
  --------
  Myron Nelson
  Mesa, AZ
  Emp completed, legacy build fuse in progress
  
  
  
  
  Read this topic online here:
  
  http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=243569#243569
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  ===========
  -List" target="_blank">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?AeroElectric-List
  ===========
  http://forums.matronics.com
  ===========
  le, List Admin.
  ="_blank">http://www.matronics.com/contribution
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  [b]
 
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		nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Wed May 13, 2009 6:16 am    Post subject: Battery Charger as Ground Power | 
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				At 06:08 AM 5/12/2009, you wrote:
   	  | Quote: | 	 		  i have 6 or 8 of these little chargers on all my toys. i have noticed on some some that the voltage was too low. i tried once to adjust the voltage but couldn't get anything to turn.i guess i will go back and try again to adjust the voltage on a couple that are too low. on the one that was too high i soldered a diode in line and dropped the voltage.
          bob noffs
 
  On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 8:31 PM, David L. <skywagon(at)charter.net (skywagon(at)charter.net)> wrote:
    --> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "David L." <skywagon(at)charter.net (skywagon(at)charter.net)>
  
   The little, cheap Harbor Freight "maintainers" work quite well.  I have used several.  One key point however,  ..many of them come set a tad too high in their fixed "float" voltage, to my thinking.  I have seen them as high as 13.9 v.
 
   The good news, is they can be adjusted to the float voltage that you want.  The little controller box should have a back lid that is lightly glued in place.  Carefully work a very narrow blade screw driver or other tough, but thin device into the glued seam and work it until the back pops off.  Inside is a small circuit board and potentiometer.  It may have a spot of RTV on it. Work this loose.  Turning the pot CW lowers to float voltage.  I like about 13.2 v.  Others may want a slightly different setting.  I usually locate where the pot slotted screw adjust hole is located next to the little case and drill a 3/16 hole.  That way, it can be adjusted from the outside.  The little unit is quite stable after you get the setting where you want it. David | 	   
    David's suggestions are worthy of consideration but
    he doesn't mention specific model numbers from
    H.F. I've tested several battery charger products
    from H.F. and found some that were not suited to our tasks.
    
    What we're looking for are devices that first
    "top off" a battery and then "drop to maintenance".
    This kind of behavior is illustrated in . . .
 
   http://www.aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Curves/schumacher_3.jpg
 
    This curve is from the Schumacher 1562 series chargers available
    from WalMart for about $20. There are dozens of other
    products that produce similar charge/maintenance profiles.
    This one  . . . 
 
   http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/displayitem.taf?Itemnumber=42292 
 
    . . . does not.
 
    I found a pot inside to adjust the output voltage . . .
    but only ONE pot. It's a device suitable for maintaining
    an already charged battery (adjust it for 13.1 volts) but
    will not charge a battery.
 
    Based on its description and price, this device
 
   http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/displayitem.taf?Itemnumber=99857 
 
    shows more promise. Haven't had time to go get one and
    check it out but in the mean time, the Schumacher
    1562 is a sure bet
 
   http://aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Battery_Chargers/Schumacher_Chargers/1562.jpg 
 
  
    Bob . . .    [quote][b]
 
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		tonybabb(at)alejandra.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Fri May 15, 2009 1:16 pm    Post subject: Battery Charger as Ground Power | 
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				Hi  Bob,
   
  Perhaps you could help me understand what the words  were that you saw in the advert that made you think HF item number 99857  might do the job (I understand you'd want to test it to confirm) versus very  similar words in the ad for HF item number 42292 that you said definitely won't  do the job. Both say they "maintain a full charge  without over charging". 
   
  Below  is the description for 99857 from the HF web site
   
  [*]Three-stage fully automatic charging protects and prolongs battery life  [*]Auto on/off trickle charging stage keeps 12 volt batteries fully charged  without overcharging  [*]Equipped with overload protection, short circuit protection, and reverse  polarity protection for added safety  [*]Also great for maintaining batteries while in storage  [*]Has LED charge indicators  [*]Includes a bracket for permanent mounting   
  and  here's the description for 42292 from the HF web site
     - Use on 12 volt batteries while in storage or during cold weather    
 - Floating circuit maintains a full charge without overcharging    
 - Automatic safety shutoff 
   Is  there any way the electron challenged such as myself could tell or do we just  have to buy and test - or follow your recommendations. Am I being naive in  believing manufacturers claims? 
   
  Thanks  for this and all your other explanations.
   
  Tony  Babb
  [quote]   
    --
 
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