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Light pigtail

 
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rvg8tor



Joined: 06 Apr 2009
Posts: 50
Location: Olympia, WA

PostPosted: Sun Sep 02, 2012 11:52 pm    Post subject: Light pigtail Reply with quote

I think it is called a pigtail I originally wired my RV-8A to use Van's 75W halogen landing and taxi light system. I ran 16 AWG wire from a 15A breaker to the switch, the switch is set up as OFF-TAXI-LAND, so power only goes to either the landing light set (2 bulbs on each wing) or landing light set.

I have decided to now go with a fancy LED landing taxi light. This light comes with a pigtail out of a circuit unit and the wire is 18AWG except the ground is 16AWG, only 1 ground for entire light sytem. I have wired this into the plane and it works fine but then I am thinking I need to go down to a 10A breaker. These lights pull under 3 amps each so not a lot of draw. Would I do okay to leave things as they are, one 16 AWG wire to the switch that in turn feeds either wires to the taxi light or wires to the landing light, all 16AWG. My only issue is with the wires going into the light housing, the power wires are 18AWG and the ground is 16 AWG. Perhaps an inline fuse at the transition would be in order to protect the short run of 18AWG wire? Now that I think about it the pigtail is only about 4" so maybe I am okay, and they only have one 16AWG wire as the return.

The manufacturer recommended set up is two 10A breakers to two switches and one 16AWG ground as the return path.

Sorry for the long post, this is late at night and I am half brainstorming my issue with this post. I appreciate any light one can shed, pun intended.

Cheers


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Mike "Nemo" Elliott
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PostPosted: Mon Sep 03, 2012 6:28 am    Post subject: Light pigtail Reply with quote

The manufacturer recommended set up is two 10A breakers to two
switches and one 16AWG ground as the return path.

It would help to see the manufacturer's installation
instructions along with any wiring diagrams offered.
If these are LED fixtures, then 10A is WAAAaaayyy too
big.

Sorry for the long post, this is late at night and I am half
brainstorming my issue with this post. I appreciate any light one
can shed, pun intended.

Need DATA on the proposed lighting fixtures.
Bob . . .


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rvg8tor



Joined: 06 Apr 2009
Posts: 50
Location: Olympia, WA

PostPosted: Mon Sep 03, 2012 7:36 am    Post subject: Re: Light pigtail Reply with quote

Attached are the instructions, I used for the install. They include a wire diagram. I am currently not going to hook up the Wig Wag feature, this was not planned when I wired the plane a couple years ago, I will add this feature after I am flying this year with any luck!

Cheers

Can't seem to get the file to attach, the instructions can be found here;

http://aircraftspruce.com/catalog/pdf/11-09675.pdf


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PostPosted: Mon Sep 03, 2012 10:45 am    Post subject: Light pigtail Reply with quote

At 10:36 AM 9/3/2012, you wrote:


Attached are the instructions, I used for the install. They include
a wire diagram.

Hmmmm . . . the wiring is, shall we say, unconventional.
Circuit protection is usually installed at the bus
UPSTREAM of control switches. Assuming the stated
current draw numbers are for EACH of TWO fixtures, then
system demands for Landing lights is 4.4A and Taxi lights
is 5.8A. Position lights would be something less than 1A
average.

The nominal wire sizing is a bit heavy, the whole system
could be wired with 20AWG and breakered at 7A, or
fused at 10A (Don't want to operate past the 1/4th derating
for fuses in the Taxi light slot. Position lights could
run from a 5A branch. While the control wires are probably
properly sized for loads, it's a good practice not to wire
airframe accessories with less that 22AWG just for general
robustness and workability issues.

I am currently not going to hook up the Wig Wag feature, this was
not planned when I wired the plane a couple years ago, I will add
this feature after I am flying this year with any luck!

If your wires are in place, then the notion of
downsizing breakers or fuses consistent with new
system requirements is a reasonable thing to do.
Bob . . .


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mrspudandcompany(at)veriz
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PostPosted: Mon Sep 03, 2012 11:31 am    Post subject: Light pigtail Reply with quote

Attached are the instructions, I used for the install. They include
a wire diagram.

Hmmmm . . . the wiring is, shall we say, unconventional.
Circuit protection is usually installed at the bus
UPSTREAM of control switches. Assuming the stated
current draw numbers are for EACH of TWO fixtures, then
system demands for Landing lights is 4.4A and Taxi lights
is 5.8A. Position lights would be something less than 1A
average.

The nominal wire sizing is a bit heavy, the whole system
could be wired with 20AWG and breakered at 7A, or
fused at 10A (Don't want to operate past the 1/4th derating
for fuses in the Taxi light slot. Position lights could
run from a 5A branch. While the control wires are probably
properly sized for loads, it's a good practice not to wire
airframe accessories with less that 22AWG just for general
robustness and workability issues.

I am currently not going to hook up the Wig Wag feature, this was
not planned when I wired the plane a couple years ago, I will add
this feature after I am flying this year with any luck!

If your wires are in place, then the notion of
downsizing breakers or fuses consistent with new
system requirements is a reasonable thing to do.
Bob . . .
Question: If I understand correctly the plan is to use the
existing wiring, which was sized originally to the existing
breakers. I understand that the breakers are oversize for the new
lights, but why would it be suggested to lower the current
rating size of the breaker, since it is there only to protect the
wire?
Roger


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rvg8tor



Joined: 06 Apr 2009
Posts: 50
Location: Olympia, WA

PostPosted: Tue Sep 04, 2012 6:49 am    Post subject: Re: Light pigtail Reply with quote

mrspudandcompany(at)veriz wrote:
Attached are the instructions, I used for the install. They include
a wire diagram.

Hmmmm . . . the wiring is, shall we say, unconventional.
Circuit protection is usually installed at the bus
UPSTREAM of control switches. Assuming the stated
current draw numbers are for EACH of TWO fixtures, then
system demands for Landing lights is 4.4A and Taxi lights
is 5.8A. Position lights would be something less than 1A
average.

The nominal wire sizing is a bit heavy, the whole system
could be wired with 20AWG and breakered at 7A, or
fused at 10A (Don't want to operate past the 1/4th derating
for fuses in the Taxi light slot. Position lights could
run from a 5A branch. While the control wires are probably
properly sized for loads, it's a good practice not to wire
airframe accessories with less that 22AWG just for general
robustness and workability issues.

I am currently not going to hook up the Wig Wag feature, this was
not planned when I wired the plane a couple years ago, I will add
this feature after I am flying this year with any luck!

If your wires are in place, then the notion of
downsizing breakers or fuses consistent with new
system requirements is a reasonable thing to do.
Bob . . .
Question: If I understand correctly the plan is to use the
existing wiring, which was sized originally to the existing
breakers. I understand that the breakers are oversize for the new
lights, but why would it be suggested to lower the current
rating size of the breaker, since it is there only to protect the
wire?

Roger


This is ultimately my question as well, to change the breaker is a bit of a pain at this point and since it does protect the wire I was hoping to leave the installation as is. I know the wire is way bigger than needed. My risk is the pigtail out of the light, the power wires are 18 AWG but they are very short. In a dead short, do you think the breaker would still pop before the 18AWG wires burned up?


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PostPosted: Tue Sep 04, 2012 7:25 am    Post subject: Light pigtail Reply with quote

> Question: If I understand correctly the plan is to use the
> existing wiring, which was sized originally to the existing
> breakers. I understand that the breakers are oversize for the
> new lights, but why would it be suggested to lower the current
> rating size of the breaker, since it is there only to protect
> the wire?
>
>
> Roger
This is ultimately my question as well, to change the breaker is a
bit of a pain at this point and since it does protect the wire I was
hoping to leave the installation as is. I know the wire is way
bigger than needed. My risk is the pigtail out of the light, the
power wires are 18 AWG but they are very short. In a dead short, do
you think the breaker would still pop before the 18AWG wires burned up?

Absolutely. Breakers actually don't even protect the
wire but the wire's insulation. See:

http://tinyurl.com/6qr72fr

Leaving the breakers in place represents no risk
to comfortable termination of flight under the
worst case failures. Even if those wires DID burn up,
what's the additional risk to an assembly that's already
in trouble?

Wire sizing and associated protection calls for
considering a huge combination of factors for
load dynamics, environment, and effects of any
given failure.

The philosophy for wire and protection sizing is
VERY conservative consistent with not wasting a
lot of time doing an FMEA for EACH protected
branch. AC43-13 is technically correct but
philosophically pedantic . . . but consider
the authorship . . .
Bob . . .


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