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peterc(at)pipcom.com
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PostPosted: Fri Mar 02, 2007 7:32 am    Post subject: batteries Reply with quote

Bob would you mind commenting on this?

First battery selection. I can understand that AH capacity is a good measurement for people with "electric" airplanes that need emergency capacity but suppose your prime concern is cranking ability (amps/speed) as may be the case for those of us flying Rotax "magneto" engines. What specs should we be using to compare batteries or is it even possible considering the variation in how the numbers are derived between manufacturers? Don't I want something like a max cold cranking amps number (which also seems to be calculated differently between manufacturers)?

Next, your Rotax diagram shows #4 wire. Would I get any noticeable benefit going to #2 if my runs are less than 3 feet?

Finally, since cranking is my priority I plan to take a ground run directly from battery to starter then back to your style firewall ground. Worthwhile?

My battery is on the floor between the rudder pedals. The starter solenoid has its battery post bolted right to the + battery post; a manual Hella switch is mounted with a short plate right on the neg battery post so there are only two cables + and - to starter with a third from starter to ground bolt on firewall.

Like it?
Thanks
Peter

[quote][b]


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N1DeltaWhiskey(at)comcast
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PostPosted: Fri Mar 02, 2007 10:11 am    Post subject: batteries Reply with quote

Peter, I have some comments for you to consider.

Battery and wire size selection: Look for a battery, regardless of size, that has low internal resistance (such as the Odyssey brand) RG battery - that will likely have a bigger impact on starting than anything else in your circuit. What is the voltage drop you expect in #4 vs. #2 wire for a 6' run (out and back) while flowing about 250 amps? If you determine that, then you can answer your own question on wire size.

Ground routing: Makes sense. The return wire from the starter ground to the firewall then could be much smaller, sized to handle the other loads that you might have and same as battery to fuse block/breaker bus for the positive side.

Solenoid mounting: I think mounting anything to the battery posts other than a connector wire is asking for trouble. Vibration will tend to cause the solenoid weight to eventually work harden and break the battery post. Would recommend a much different approach here.

Doug Windhorn
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peterc(at)pipcom.com
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PostPosted: Fri Mar 02, 2007 11:36 am    Post subject: batteries Reply with quote

Doug, thanks for your comments.

OK, so I did the calculation and the difference in voltage drop is .34 volts between using 2 vs 4. I'd guess that this isn't significant but is it in cold temps?

With regard to bolting to the battery lugs, I've also modified the battery case to provide additional support to the switch and solonoid.
Peter
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nuckollsr(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Fri Mar 02, 2007 2:49 pm    Post subject: batteries Reply with quote

At 10:30 AM 3/2/2007 -0500, you wrote:

Quote:
Bob would you mind commenting on this?

First battery selection. I can understand that AH capacity is a good
measurement for people with "electric" airplanes that need emergency
capacity but suppose your prime concern is cranking ability (amps/speed)
as may be the case for those of us flying Rotax "magneto" engines. What
specs should we be using to compare batteries or is it even possible
considering the variation in how the numbers are derived between
manufacturers? Don't I want something like a max cold cranking amps
number (which also seems to be calculated differently between manufacturers)?

Next, your Rotax diagram shows #4 wire. Would I get any noticeable benefit
going to #2 if my runs are less than 3 feet?

No

Quote:

Finally, since cranking is my priority I plan to take a ground run
directly from battery to starter then back to your style firewall ground.
Worthwhile?

Probably not.
Quote:

My battery is on the floor between the rudder pedals. The starter solenoid
has its battery post bolted right to the + battery post; a manual Hella
switch is mounted with a short plate right on the neg battery post so
there are only two cables + and - to starter with a third from starter to
ground bolt on firewall.

Please don't mount hardware directly to any battery post.
4AWG SOFT jumpers fabricated from welding cable are recommended.
The only two in-flight failures of batteries I've encountered
were broken off connection posts precipitated by too much
mass mounted too rigidly to the posts.

For the distances you're talking about, 4AWG will be fine.

Bob . . .
----------------------------------------
( IF one aspires to be "world class", )
( what ever you do must be exercised )
( EVERY day . . . )
( R. L. Nuckolls III )
----------------------------------------


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Joined: 13 Feb 2006
Posts: 65
Location: North Coast, USA

PostPosted: Fri Mar 02, 2007 5:28 pm    Post subject: Re: batteries Reply with quote

N1DeltaWhiskey(at)comcast wrote:
What is the voltage drop you expect in #4 vs. #2 wire for a 6' run (out and back) while flowing about 250 amps?
This is apparently about a Rotax 91x engine, though? The starter relay supplied with my kitplane for a 912/914 is 70A. More consistent with the kW spec of the starter motor. Maybe 50A average?

Fred F.


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nuckollsr(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Sat Mar 03, 2007 12:33 pm    Post subject: batteries Reply with quote

At 05:28 PM 3/2/2007 -0800, you wrote:

Quote:

<n3eu(at)oh.rr.com>
N1DeltaWhiskey(at)comcast wrote:
> What is the voltage drop you expect in #4 vs. #2 wire for a 6' run
(out and back) while flowing about 250 amps?
This is apparently about a Rotax 91x engine, though? The starter relay
supplied with my kitplane for a 912/914 is 70A. More consistent with the
kW spec of the starter motor. Maybe 50A average?

"Ratings" on switching contacts are to be considered with
a grain of salt . . . or sand. The probability of satisfactory
service life is only loosely related to "ratings".

The ratings are based on numbers of times a contact can
SWITCH certain kinds of loads . . . interestingly enough,
starter motors on engines are almost NEVER included in
the suite of standard loads for the establishment of
ratings.

For example, the el-cheeso battery contactors used on
tens of thousands of GA aircraft are RATED at 70A, yet
we've routinely cranked engines through these devices
with draws of 200-300 amps for decades. Given the enduring
presence of these critters in the marketplace, one must
deduce that users are seeing a satisfactory service life.
I.e., good value for the investment.

The thing that's hard on devices that switch starters is
not the average running current. The switch-killer
is the locked-rotor or inrush current that flows in the
milliseconds that the motor is accelerating up from
zero velocity while at the same time, contacts on the
switch are making MULTIPLE closures. See:

http://www.aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Curves/switch_transition.jpg

These are switches and not contactors but the effects
are similar for all such devices. In a millisecond to
a millisecond and a half, these switches close, open
and re-close many times.

This is why we SWITCH starter loads with STARTER CONTACTORS.
These have exceedingly thin and light contacts compared
to continuous duty contactors . . . these contacts are
driven together with much greater force so as to minimize
the bouncing and contact resistance. See:

http://www.aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Contactors/S702-1b.jpg

Another consideration for service life is total operations
per flight hour extrapolated out to total operations per
year. In the average GA aircraft, any switch or contactor
is hard pressed to see more than a few hundred operations
per year . . . a device that is RATED in the tens of thousands
of operations at RATED loads that may not be representative
of what the switch really sees in the airplane.

It's easy to see that many components might deliver satisfactory
service life in terms of chronological age in the airplane
in spite of being "overloaded" with respect to catalog ratings.

Keep in mind too that connections, and contacts for switching
devices ADD TO THE TOTAL loop resistance and may DOUBLE the
total loop resistance when compared wire resistance alone.

These are some of the reasons why it's not terribly useful
to agonize over the resistance of 2AWG vs 4AWG or the ratings
of any particular switch or contactor over another. The
ultimate test of your cranking system's ability to get the
engine moving is only measurable with some pretty sophisticated
test equipment. I have a DAS that will gather 2000 samples per
second so that instantaneous energy losses in the various
components and wire lengths can be quantified and decisions
made for optimization.

I'm not trying to discourage anyone from a quest to understand
the finer details of their ship's electrical system . . . but
know too that decisions made on rudimentary, single item
calculations and/or catalog data for components may not
stand on solid physics.

Bob . . .


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