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Contactor Failure

 
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Speedy11(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 5:47 pm    Post subject: Contactor Failure Reply with quote

Any folks had a contactor failure?
My understanding was that contactors are not failure prone. I understood that was the reasoning behind inserting one between the battery and the starter solenoid.
I had one fail the other day (actually it stuck in the closed position) after 40 hours of use. It was an intermittent duty contactor installed between the #4 welding cable from the positive battery post and the Skytec starter.
If my engine doesn't start on the third blade, I release the starter button to check what I've missed and try it again. When I released the starter button, the prop kept turning. I quickly hit the starter button again thinking it might have stuck. The blades kept turning. I turned off both batteries and all fuel source. The blades had stopped by then (10 seconds) but the starter was still engaged. Set the brake and ran to the hangar for wrenches. I had to disconnect the battery to stop the starter. There was no other way.
Did I design in a fault? Aren't most custom-built airplanes built with a contactor between the hot battery and the starter? Should I have some other type of disconnect between the battery and the contactor?
Stan Sutterfield
RV-8A flying
[quote][b]


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rckol



Joined: 14 Nov 2008
Posts: 36

PostPosted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 6:28 pm    Post subject: Re: Contactor Failure Reply with quote

If I understand your system, you have a circuit from the battery straight to the starter contactor.

Running the starter contactor in series with the master bus contactor allows you to kill the starter with the master switch in the event that your starter or starter contactor decides to run on.

Bob's Z designs typically have this feature.


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 7:39 pm    Post subject: Contactor Failure Reply with quote

At 07:45 PM 11/29/2009, you wrote:
Quote:
Any folks had a contactor failure?
My understanding was that contactors are not failure prone.

Don't know what you mean by "failure prone".
All parts have service lives. The service
lives of all parts are subject to the stresses
of the installation combined with the effects
of manufacturing variability.

Quote:
I understood that was the reasoning behind inserting one between the battery and the starter solenoid.
I had one fail the other day (actually it stuck in the closed position) after 40 hours of use. It was an intermittent duty contactor installed between the #4 welding cable from the positive battery post and the Skytec starter.

Does your starter feature a contactor/solenoid
combination that controls both power to the motor
while extending the pinion gear for engagement?

Quote:
If my engine doesn't start on the third blade, I release the starter button to check what I've missed and try it again. When I released the starter button, the prop kept turning. I quickly hit the starter button again thinking it might have stuck. The blades kept turning. I turned off both batteries and all fuel source. The blades had stopped by then (10 seconds) but the starter was still engaged. Set the brake and ran to the hangar for wrenches. I had to disconnect the battery to stop the starter. There was no other way.
Did I design in a fault?

Does your starter current go through the battery
master contactor as depicted on ALL z-figures and
common to ALL type certificated aircraft?

Quote:
Aren't most custom-built airplanes built with a contactor between the hot battery and the starter? Should I have some other type of disconnect between the battery and the contactor?

Yup, the TC aircraft do it too . . . it's called
the battery master contactor.

As to the original failure. Permanent magnet starters
offer VERY high in-rush currents because the current
limiting characteristics of the series field are not
present. The device selected to actively control
starter current is not up to the task.

I was a participant in the deliberations that set
design goals at B&C some years back when consideration
was given to PM fields. For a several reasons, B&C
stayed with the wound fields. One reason germane to
your experience was the fact that battery internal
impedances were going down while stall currents of
"modern" PM starters was going up. This combination
predicted a potential for increased stress in contact
closing on the starter contactor.

If memory serves me correctly, the Skytec's built in
contactor is probably tailored to this extra stress
but it DOES exhibit inrush current issues of its own.
See . . .

http://www.aeroelectric.com/articles/strtctr.pdf

Suggest you rewire to eliminate the external, intermittant
duty starter contactor. Run your starter current through
the battery master as suggested in the drawings. Buffer
the inrush current to your starter contactor as suggested
in Z-22.



Bob . . .

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[quote][b]


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Eric M. Jones



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 565
Location: Massachusetts

PostPosted: Mon Nov 30, 2009 5:57 am    Post subject: Re: Contactor Failure Reply with quote

After reviewing the endless promotion of the way it has always been done, please re-read the AeroElectric-Lists posts of October 12-13:

http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=267757

Then--Do it the way the manufacturer suggests. Hey, there's a radical
idea!

Eric's five point plan for elimination contactor failure:

1) Don't use Type-70 contactors for critical tasks.
2) Don't use diodes for coil suppression duty. Use bi-directional Zeners.
3) Follow the manufacturers' suggestions.
4) Ignore the man behind the curtain.
5) Examine carefully the ideas of anybody who claims he can't possibly be wrong.

"Every act of conscious learning requires the willingness to suffer an injury to one's self-esteem.That is why young children, before they are aware of their own self-importance, learn so easily; and why older persons, especially if vain or important, cannot learn at all."
-Thomas Szasz


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www.PerihelionDesign.com
113 Brentwood Drive
Southbridge, MA 01550
(508) 764-2072
emjones(at)charter.net
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PostPosted: Mon Nov 30, 2009 6:51 am    Post subject: Contactor Failure Reply with quote

Yes I agree we should always use the latest greatest most expensive
solution whether there is any demonstrated need or benefit.
Manufacturers have never overstated or misled anyone. Sound engineering
can't be trusted and we waste our time trying to understand physics anyway.
Ken

do not archive

Eric M. Jones wrote:
Quote:


After reviewing the endless promotion of the way it has always been done, please re-read the AeroElectric-Lists posts of October 12-13:

http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p 67757

Then--Do it the way the manufacturer suggests. Hey, there's a radical
idea!

Eric's five point plan for elimination contactor failure:

1) Don't use Type-70 contactors for critical tasks.
2) Don't use diodes for coil suppression duty. Use bi-directional Zeners.
3) Follow the manufacturers' suggestions.
4) Ignore the man behind the curtain.
5) Examine carefully the ideas of anybody who claims he can't possibly be wrong.

"Every act of conscious learning requires the willingness to suffer an injury to one's self-esteem.That is why young children, before they are aware of their own self-importance, learn so easily; and why older persons, especially if vain or important, cannot learn at all."
-Thomas Szasz

--------
Eric M. Jones
www.PerihelionDesign.com
113 Brentwood Drive
Southbridge, MA 01550
(508) 764-2072
emjones(at)charter.net



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bakerocb



Joined: 15 Jan 2006
Posts: 727
Location: FAIRFAX VA

PostPosted: Mon Nov 30, 2009 6:51 am    Post subject: Contactor Failure Reply with quote

11/30/2009

Hello Stan, You wrote:

1)"Any folks had a contactor failure?"

Not on my airplane, but as an A&P I am aware of several contactor failures.
Two failure modes that I have personally been involved in are: a) Fine
contactor coil wire fractures because of vibration. b) Main current transfer
bar inside the contactor gets eaten away and no longer makes contact.

Your contactor failure sounds like a third failure mode -- a welded main
current transfer bar because of extremely high current transfer. If you
still have the contactor why not cut it open to confirm?

2) "My understanding was that contactors are not failure prone."

"failure prone" is a very unquantifiable term, but they do definitely fail.
That is why you need a plan B to permit recovery regardless of the mode of
contactor failure.

3) "Did I design in a fault?"

Yes.

4) "Aren't most custom-built airplanes built with a contactor between the
hot battery and the starter?"

No, they are built with two contactors between the hot battery and the
starter. A main battery contactor (continuous use type) and a starter
contactor (intermittent use type).

Many starters now days have a contactor / solenoid as part of the starter
itself for the purpose of moving the pinion gear into engagement. (This
eliminates the old Bendix type mechanical starter engagement method.)

That is why when discussing this subject the term "starter contactor" can
lead to some confusion unless the context makes it very clear which one of
the two "starter contactors" one is referring to.

5) "Should I have some other type of disconnect between the battery and the
contactor?"

Yes.

6) "I understood that was the reasoning behind inserting one between the
battery and the
starter solenoid."

Inserting only one contactor in this manner leaves you susceptible to the
welded main bar transfer failure. A separate main battery contactor that in
turn feeds the starter contactor would leave you a means of stopping current
flow to the starter contactor in the case of this type of failure mode.

A separate battery fed essential or endurance bus would leave you a means of
recovery if you suffer either a fine coil wire failure or an eaten away main
transfer bar failure in your battery contactor while flying.

If your starter contactor suffers from either a fine wire failure or an
eaten away main transfer bar failure then you should discover this problem
on the ground because the engine won't crank and your recovery is to just
replace the starter contactor.

'OC' Says: "The best investment we can make is the effort to gather and
understand knowledge."

==================================================Time: 05:47:53 PM PST US
From: Speedy11(at)aol.com
Subject: Contactor Failure

Any folks had a contactor failure?
My understanding was that contactors are not failure prone. I understood
that was the reasoning behind inserting one between the battery and the
starter solenoid.
I had one fail the other day (actually it stuck in the closed position)
after 40 hours of use. It was an intermittent duty contactor installed
between the #4 welding cable from the positive battery post and the Skytec
starter.
If my engine doesn't start on the third blade, I release the starter button
to check what I've missed and try it again. When I released the starter
button, the prop kept turning. I quickly hit the starter button again
thinking it might have stuck. The blades kept turning. I turned off both
batteries and all fuel source. The blades had stopped by then (10 seconds)
but
the starter was still engaged. Set the brake and ran to the hangar for
wrenches. I had to disconnect the battery to stop the starter. There was
no
other way.

Did I design in a fault? Aren't most custom-built airplanes built with a
contactor between the hot battery and the starter? Should I have some
other type of disconnect between the battery and the contactor?
Stan Sutterfield
RV-8A flying


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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Mon Nov 30, 2009 8:50 am    Post subject: Contactor Failure Reply with quote

At 07:57 AM 11/30/2009, you wrote:
Quote:


After reviewing the endless promotion of the way it has always been
done, please re-read the AeroElectric-Lists posts of October 12-13:

http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p 67757

Then--Do it the way the manufacturer suggests. Hey, there's a radical
idea!

Eric's five point plan for elimination contactor failure:

1) Don't use Type-70 contactors for critical tasks.

The failed contactor wasn't a type-70.

Quote:
2) Don't use diodes for coil suppression duty. Use bi-directional Zeners.

How is it that you deduce a plain diode suppression
system as a contributing cause for the failure
being discussed? I hypothesized a cause for
the failure based on 40+ years observation/
experience with the PM motors in general and PM
starters in particular. Do you have an alternative
hypothesis? I'd be pleased to know it.

Quote:
3) Follow the manufacturers' suggestions.

Which suggestions, if any, were being ignored
in the instance before us?
Quote:

4) Ignore the man behind the curtain.

I'm not behind any curtain. Every word I've ever
written has been archived and made available for
critical review by anyone having an interest.

Quote:
5) Examine carefully the ideas of anybody who claims he can't
possibly be wrong.

Eric, you've been invited numerous times to offer
alternative recipes for success supported by analysis
of simple-ideas and underlying physics. You have yet
to offer anything beyond parroting bad articles
with mis-applied data and/or facts taken out of context.

I claim nothing about the infallibility of simple-
ideas or recipes for success offered in my writing.
Nobody would be more pleased than I to know of any
errors of fact or logic. If you have a point of
physics and/or proven practice for us to examine,
please make it.
Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( It's MATRONICS FUND RAISER MONTH! )
( Do your part to keep this marvelous )
( tool sharp and available to all our )
( brothers in the OBAM aviation )
( community. )
---------------------------------------


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joemotis(at)gmail.com
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PostPosted: Mon Nov 30, 2009 8:57 am    Post subject: Contactor Failure Reply with quote

Hey OC,
 
What an accurate and reasoned answer to Stans question. Thank you for sharing it with the list.
 
Joe Motis
CH 750 WW Corvair
do not archive
On Mon, Nov 30, 2009 at 6:20 AM, <bakerocb(at)cox.net (bakerocb(at)cox.net)> wrote:
[quote]--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: <bakerocb(at)cox.net (bakerocb(at)cox.net)>

11/30/2009

Hello Stan, You wrote:

1)"Any folks had a contactor failure?"

Not on my airplane, but as an A&P I am aware of several contactor failures. Two failure modes that I have personally been involved in are: a) Fine contactor coil wire fractures because of vibration. b) Main current transfer bar inside the contactor gets eaten away and no longer makes contact.

Your contactor failure sounds like a third failure mode -- a welded main current transfer bar because of extremely high current transfer. If you still have the contactor why not cut it open to confirm?

2) "My understanding was that contactors are not failure prone."

"failure prone" is a very unquantifiable term, but they do definitely fail. That is why you need a plan B to permit recovery regardless of the mode of contactor failure.

3) "Did I design in a fault?"

Yes.

4) "Aren't most custom-built airplanes built  with a contactor between the hot battery and the starter?"

No, they are built with two contactors between the hot battery and the starter. A main battery contactor (continuous use type) and a starter contactor (intermittent use type).

Many starters now days have a contactor / solenoid as part of the starter itself for the purpose of moving the pinion gear into engagement. (This eliminates the old Bendix type mechanical starter engagement method.)

That is why when discussing this subject the term "starter contactor" can lead to some confusion unless the context makes it very clear which one of the two "starter contactors" one is referring to.

5) "Should I have  some other type of disconnect between the battery and the contactor?"

Yes.

6) "I  understood that was the reasoning behind inserting one between the battery and  the
starter solenoid."

Inserting only one contactor in this manner leaves you susceptible to the welded main bar transfer failure. A separate main battery contactor that in turn feeds the starter contactor would leave you a means of stopping current flow to the starter contactor in the case of this type of failure mode.

A separate battery fed essential or endurance bus would leave you a means of recovery if you suffer either a fine coil wire failure or an eaten away main transfer bar failure in your battery contactor while flying.

If your starter contactor suffers from either a fine wire failure or an eaten away main transfer bar failure then you should discover this problem on the ground because the engine won't crank and your recovery is to just replace the starter contactor.

'OC' Says: "The best investment we can make is the effort to gather and understand knowledge."

=========================Time: 05:47:53 PM PST US
From: Speedy11(at)aol.com (Speedy11(at)aol.com)
Subject: Contactor Failure

Any folks had a contactor failure?
My understanding was that contactors are not failure prone.  I  understood
that was the reasoning behind inserting one between the battery and  the
starter solenoid.
I had one fail the other day (actually it stuck in the closed position)
after 40 hours of use.  It was an intermittent duty contactor installed
between the #4 welding cable from the positive battery post and the Skytec
starter.
If my engine doesn't start on the third blade, I release the starter button
to check what I've missed and try it again.  When I released the starter
button, the prop kept turning.  I quickly hit the starter button again
thinking it might have stuck.  The blades kept turning.  I turned off  both
batteries and all fuel source.  The blades had stopped by then (10  seconds) but
the starter was still engaged.  Set the brake and ran to the  hangar for
wrenches.  I had to disconnect the battery to stop the  starter.  There was no
other way.

Did I design in a fault?  Aren't most custom-built airplanes built  with a
contactor between the hot battery and the starter?  Should I have  some
other type of disconnect between the battery and the contactor?
Stan Sut9;s Terrific Free Incentive Gifts provided
he Builder's Bookstore www.buildersbooks.com
s.com/contribution" target="_blank">http://www.matronics.com/contribution
                             -Matt Dralle, Li    - The AeroElectric-List Email Forum -
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oElectric-List" target="_blank">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?AeroEl====================
http://forums.m===========

[b]


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 30, 2009 6:01 pm    Post subject: Contactor Failure Reply with quote

I reviewed my wiring diagrams and I did not run my starter current through the battery master prior to going to the starter contactor and then to the starter solenoid. I will make the correction.
Stan Sutterfield
Do not archive
Quote:
Suggest you rewire to eliminate the external, intermittant
  duty starter contactor. Run your starter current through
  the battery master as suggested in the drawings. Buffer
the inrush current to your starter contactor as suggested
  in Z-22.



[quote][b]


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 30, 2009 6:16 pm    Post subject: Contactor Failure Reply with quote

At 07:59 PM 11/30/2009, you wrote:
Quote:
I reviewed my wiring diagrams and I did not run my starter current through the battery master prior to going to the starter contactor and then to the starter solenoid. I will make the correction.

That change would prevent a repeat of your most
recent experience. But if the failed intermittent
duty contactor has been replaced with the same
part, then you may be setting yourself up for
an identical albeit less traumatic repeat.

It may be that your starter contactor is not necessary
at all. Have you considered using only that contactor
which is fitted to the starter? How did you wire the
starter contactor's engagement power terminal?


Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( It's MATRONICS FUND RAISER MONTH! )
( Do your part to keep this marvelous )
( tool sharp and available to all our )
( brothers in the OBAM aviation )
( community. )
---------------------------------------

[quote][b]


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PostPosted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 11:06 am    Post subject: Contactor Failure Reply with quote

The contactor in question is a B&C S702-1. I talked to Bill Bainbridge at B&C and he suggested trying the contactor again. I will bench test it (actually already have but will do it again) and rewire according to B&C diagram with battery switch between battery and starter contactor. That way I can remove power to the contactor if needed.  Right now I have installed a continuous duty contactor that I had lying on the shelf, but it doesn't fit into my space as well as the B&C contactor.
I did consider using only the starter-fitted contactor, but was trying to follow Aeroelectric advice so inserted the additional contactor. It would take additional wiring effort now to change.
The B&C S702-1 contactor has an internal diode so the starter switch was connected to the S terminal with no external diode. I did not install a starter engaged light, but plan to add one as I rewire things.
Rewiring will consist of adding #2 welding cable from the battery to the battery switch and then to the contactor. Also I'll wire up a starter engaged light.
Stan Sutterfield

Quote:
>I reviewed my wiring diagrams and I did not run my starter current
Quote:
through the battery master prior to going to the starter contactor
and then to the starter solenoid. I will make the correction.

That change would prevent a repeat of your most
recent experience. But if the failed intermittent
duty contactor has been replaced with the same
part, then you may be setting yourself up for
an identical albeit less traumatic repeat.

It may be that your starter contactor is not necessary
at all. Have you considered using only that contactor
which is fitted to the starter? How did you wire the
starter contactor's engagement power terminal?



[quote][b]


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PostPosted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 2:26 pm    Post subject: Contactor Failure Reply with quote

At 01:01 PM 12/1/2009, you wrote:
Quote:
The contactor in question is a B&C S702-1. I talked to Bill Bainbridge at B&C and he suggested trying the contactor again. I will bench test it (actually already have but will do it again) and rewire according to B&C diagram with battery switch between battery and starter contactor. That way I can remove power to the contactor if needed.

That particular design has been applied in the
gazillions in automotive applications and is well
proven. There are so many clones of the concept
I'd be hard pressed to identify the original any
more. I don't know where B&C buys their inventory
now. At one time, they were offering two versions
of that form factor in intermittent duty contactors.

One version was qualified onto his first STC'd starter
installations. The second came with the inventory I sold
him and included a built in coil collapse suppression
diode. Yes, it's a lowly diode.

Quote:
Right now I have installed a continuous duty contactor that I had lying on the shelf, but it doesn't fit into my space as well as the B&C contactor.

A continuous duty contactor is never a suitable
substitute for controlling starter motors.

Quote:
I did consider using only the starter-fitted contactor, but was trying to follow Aeroelectric advice so inserted the additional contactor. It would take additional wiring effort now to change.

The "AeroElectric advice" has foundations in a lot of
discussion threads involving starters, styles of motors,
and system characteristics. If you're running a Skytec
PM starter and have jumpered the built in contactor's
control line to the main terminal, then it's almost
a certainty that your starter suffers from what we've
calls "starter run on" . . . a delayed disengagement
of the pinion gear due to counter-EMF generated by
a motor's armature spinning down in a permanent
magnet field. Ideas discovered and recipes developed
from those discussions spawned Figure Z-22.


Quote:
The B&C S702-1 contactor has an internal diode so the starter switch was connected to the S terminal with no external diode. I did not install a starter engaged light, but plan to add one as I rewire things.
Rewiring will consist of adding #2 welding cable from the battery to the battery switch and then to the contactor. Also I'll wire up a starter engaged light.


Please rewire per Z-22. This is important for several
reasons:

(1) You have a PM starter motor and the
change will improve the life of your starter motor,
pinion gear and ring gear.

(2) You'll eliminate the potential for sticking
the contactor again.

(3) This also reduces the number of metallic joints
and contact sets in series with the starter. All of
these are good things.



Bob . . .

---------------------------------------
( It's MATRONICS FUND RAISER MONTH! )
( Do your part to keep this marvelous )
( tool sharp and available to all our )
( brothers in the OBAM aviation )
( community. )
---------------------------------------

[quote][b]


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PostPosted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 8:44 am    Post subject: Contactor Failure Reply with quote

At 08:46 AM 12/2/2009, you wrote:
The continuous duty contactor I have installed is temporary. I will
replace it with an intermittent duty one.

I installed the Skytec starter as it arrived from the manufacturer -
that is, with the jumper from the contactor's control line to the
main terminal installed. I left the jumper installed because Skytec
recommend it - see
http://www.skytecair.com/images/Certified%20LS%20Wiring_1100.jpg. My
error, of course, was that I left out what they call the master solenoid.

I'm just guessing . . . but this configuration was probably
crafted to MINIMIZE changes to an existing system in a TC
aircraft. Adding the jumper to the starter contactor (a
technique adopted by B&C many years earlier) offers three
advantages. (1) you get a drop-in replacement of a previously
installed starter and (2) buffers existing ship's wiring from
experiencing the extra-ordinary inrush offered by the two-stage
solenoids as described in my article and (3) the PM motor inrush
current doesn't hit the system until BOTH the standard starter
and built-in contactors close. Since the standard contactor
closes first, there's a potential for improving life of this
contactor IF it's contacts are closed and stable when the
second set of contacts on the starter get closed a few milliseconds
later. The DOWNSIDE is the potential for suffering delayed
pinion dis-engagement.
This is Van's recommended wiring
http://www.skytecair.com/images/Van's%20Starter%20Wiring%20Lg.jpg,
but Skytec recommends against wiring this way.

This is pretty slick. The diagram suggests using the auxiliary
"I" (ignition boost) terminal available on most starter
contactors to close the starter-mounted contactor . . . again
with the idea of shifting motor inrush currents to the
starter's internal contactor. It has the advantage of breaking
the internal contactor's coil current when the external starter
contactor opens. This accomplishes the same goals as Z-22
but with an external STARTER CONTACTOR as opposed to an external
BUFFER RELAY.
Bob, are you implying that I should have removed the jumper wire from
the starter?

Not implying, recommending . . . based on what we learned
about (1) delayed disengagement and (2) higher stresses
on starter control contactor with substitution of PM
motor technology. If you already have an external contactor
installed (a la Van's suggestion) then making a simple change
to remove the jumper and wire the internal contactor control
terminal to the external contactor "I" terminal would be
a good move.

Van's drawing or Z-22 is the elegant solution for new design
in an OBAM aircraft. Skytec's drawing is the less than elegant
solution for minimizing changes to a TC aircraft when replacing
original starter called out on the ship's certification documents.
The way you had it wired ORIGINALLY wasn't all that hard on
the external contactor . . . assuming that it's contacts were
closed and stable before the internal contactor gets closed.
I've not had an opportunity to measure it but I suspect this
is the case. THEREFORE, I'm comfortable with suggesting that
your original sticking failure was probably an isolated case
and not indicative of a system design error. ADDING the battery
master contactor in series with cranking currents is the
firewall against a future repeat causing you to burn a battery
or starter.

Adding the wire to conform to Van's suggested configuration
would be a good move to take care of the potential for delayed
disengagement.

Bob . . .
////
(o o)
===========o00o=(_)=o00o=========
< Go ahead, make my day . . . >
< show me where I'm wrong. >
=================================


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