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#21
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"three-eight-hotel" wrote:
I'm going to hold off on putting the trays back in and borrow the tools from my mechanic to do it right, rather than figure out how I'm going to hold nuts on the back of trays for each screw. You mean to borrow his trained mouse, or his JB Weld to epoxy the nut in place? Sight unseen, that's what I'd do if workable. What are the screws affixing, the tray or the connector? Fred F. |
#22
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TaxSrv wrote:
You mean to borrow his trained mouse, or his JB Weld to epoxy the nut in place? I'd put in rivnuts (as Jim suggested). There's entirely too much danger of epoxying the bolt into the nut. If you do go the epoxy route, buy a bunch of nylon bolts and use those to hold the nuts in place while the epoxy cures. If any of the bolts gets glued in, they can be removed with a drill and tap pretty easily. George Patterson Drink is the curse of the land. It makes you quarrel with your neighbor. It makes you shoot at your landlord. And it makes you miss him. |
#23
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Thanks Ross,
With all of the symptoms I have been having and troubleshooting reports I have provided, I'm surprised anyone can follow these posts, because I'm having a hard enough time myself! ;-) In a previous post, I reported that I had swapped out my radio with a known working TKM replacement radio, and encountered a failure with that radio as well. I also let my instructor throw my radio in another plane, for a lesson she was giving, and she reported back that my radio worked the whole time. I also took the radio in to a Narco dealer and they ran it up on the bench for several hours and said that everything was within specifications. This, however, after they made a questionable repair only weeks earlier! Based on the TKM's failing in my plane, and my radio working in another plane, it seems unlikely that it is in the radio, but not impossible. I could easily be experiencing one set of coincidences after another! "The side tone is a product of the radio not the audio panel", perplexes me though... Reception loss and sidetone loss at the same time is the current prevolent symptom. At the occurence of failure, I have reception loss and sidetone loss, I do have sidetone going through the intercom though, as I can communicate with the passengers fine. It is only on xmit where I lose sidetone... Plugging into the aircraft jacks directly doesn't help because if I understand correctly, you wouldn't get sidetone there anyways. Sidetone in that respect is a product of the intercom, is it not? So... there are three components (radio, intercom, audio panel) that are all interconnected somehow, and that's where my eye's glaze over and I start to drool... I just don't get it??? Are there any recommended readings out there, that anyone could recommend to at least bring my up to a third grade level on this stuff? A search for "avionics for dummies", came up goose eggs! Thanks again for your responses! Todd |
#24
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I'd put in rivnuts (as Jim suggested). There's entirely too much danger of
epoxying the bolt into the nut. That's what I'm hoping for... I'll have to see what he has available and make due with what I can. To answer Fred's question, the screws are affixing the trays... I'd use his mouse, but the poor thing was helping hand prop an old Piper Cub, a couple of months ago, and wasn't following proper procedures... If you've ever seen a rodent penetrate a sheet metal hanger door, you wouldn't be surprised if I told you it was quite a mess! Thanks and Best Regards, Todd |
#25
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three-eight-hotel wrote:
Thanks Ross, With all of the symptoms I have been having and troubleshooting reports I have provided, I'm surprised anyone can follow these posts, because I'm having a hard enough time myself! ;-) In a previous post, I reported that I had swapped out my radio with a known working TKM replacement radio, and encountered a failure with that radio as well. I also let my instructor throw my radio in another plane, for a lesson she was giving, and she reported back that my radio worked the whole time. I also took the radio in to a Narco dealer and they ran it up on the bench for several hours and said that everything was within specifications. This, however, after they made a questionable repair only weeks earlier! Based on the TKM's failing in my plane, and my radio working in another plane, it seems unlikely that it is in the radio, but not impossible. I could easily be experiencing one set of coincidences after another! "The side tone is a product of the radio not the audio panel", perplexes me though... Reception loss and sidetone loss at the same time is the current prevolent symptom. At the occurence of failure, I have reception loss and sidetone loss, I do have sidetone going through the intercom though, as I can communicate with the passengers fine. It is only on xmit where I lose sidetone... Plugging into the aircraft jacks directly doesn't help because if I understand correctly, you wouldn't get sidetone there anyways. Sidetone in that respect is a product of the intercom, is it not? So... there are three components (radio, intercom, audio panel) that are all interconnected somehow, and that's where my eye's glaze over and I start to drool... I just don't get it??? The intercom and sidetone go different ways: - the intercom connects the amplified mic signal directly to the all the headphones, - the sidetone is created inside the COM radio by receiving the transmitted signal with a simple detector and feeding the signal to the headphone line. If the sidetone is missing, either the audio path is broken or the radio does not transmit properly. There is a slight possibility that the sidetone receiving circuit is the culprit, but it's so simple that the probability is tiny. Assuming that the radio behaves in another plane, I see the possible causes: - the power supply to the radio is flaky, - the microphone signal path to the radio is flaky, - the audio output path from the radio is flaky, or - the antenna connection is broken / shorted. The simultaneous loss of reception and sidetone kind of drop the microphone from the cause list above, the others are still relevant. HTH -- Tauno Voipio (OH-PYM) tauno voipio (at) iki fi |
#26
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Thanks Tauno!
The intercom and sidetone go different ways: - the intercom connects the amplified mic signal directly to the all the headphones, - the sidetone is created inside the COM radio by receiving the transmitted signal with a simple detector and feeding the signal to the headphone line. So, feeding the signal to the headphone line would automatically send the signal to all headphones on the intercom unless the intercom was in Pilot ISO mode, if I understand correctly? I'm assuming this, since the passengers can typically hear the radio calls I make. When I lose sidetone (and reception), the passengers can't hear my xmissions either, indicating, based on your response, that the signal is never being fed out of the COM radio (or possibly the signal isn't even getting to the COM radio). Am I catching on? Assuming that the radio behaves in another plane, I see the possible causes: - the power supply to the radio is flaky, - the microphone signal path to the radio is flaky, - the audio output path from the radio is flaky, or - the antenna connection is broken / shorted. The simultaneous loss of reception and sidetone kind of drop the microphone from the cause list above, the others are still relevant. If the power supply to the radio was an issue, would that be evident in the radio itself, such as led's dimming or loss of power? I never seem to notice a visible issue with power, and if it's relevant, the NAV side of the radio never seems to fail at all. I always have constant indication of a tuned in VOR, regardless of issues I am having on the COM side. This loss of reception and sidetone is ALWAYS simultaneous, so I'll skip the microphone issue. "The audio output path from the radio"... Would this be a coax cable from the radio to the intercom? I recall seeing a box (2"x4" or so), separate from the intercom, with coax from the radio to it... I tried to trace where the coax went from there, but it seemed to be buried deep inside a nest of other wires, so I gave up on trying to follow it. If the radio behaves in another plane, I am assuming you are talking about an audio output path that is not a part of the radio. So... somewhere between the radio and the intercom then??? "The antenna connection is broken/shorted" - I'm a little confused at the likelyhood of this, because what I seem to be hearing in this and previous posts is that the loss of sidetone likely rules out a connection between the radio and the antenna. Maybe I'm not catching on? ;-) Slowly but surely, I think I'm getting it, but I still think one of you guys could make a lot of money on an Avionics for Dummies book! I'd buy it! ;-) Thanks for your feedback! Todd |
#27
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Ross Richardson wrote:
: went back to the factory. It is fixed and working fine. The side tone is : a product of the radio not the audio panel. How I isolated it was The sidetone can usually be set up either way (radio or intercom). -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#28
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: Based on the TKM's failing in my plane, and my radio working in another
: plane, it seems unlikely that it is in the radio, but not impossible. : I could easily be experiencing one set of coincidences after another! Sounds like you've pretty much removed the radio from the equation. : "The side tone is a product of the radio not the audio panel", : perplexes me though... Reception loss and sidetone loss at the same : time is the current prevolent symptom. At the occurence of failure, I : have reception loss and sidetone loss, I do have sidetone going : through the intercom though, as I can communicate with the passengers : fine. "Sidetone" generally refers to hearing what you are transmitting on the radio, not what you are saying on the intercom. One could argue it's a pedantic difference, but for what you are troublshooting, the difference is important. It is only on xmit where I lose sidetone... Correction: It's only when you transmit that you should *HAVE* sidetone. Any other time your "sidetone" is simply the intercom intercom'ing. Plugging into the : aircraft jacks directly doesn't help because if I understand correctly, : you wouldn't get sidetone there anyways. Sidetone in that respect is a : product of the intercom, is it not? It could be on the intercom, on the radio, or *both*, depending on how whomever installed it decided to wire it up. So... there are three components : (radio, intercom, audio panel) that are all interconnected somehow, and : that's where my eye's glaze over and I start to drool... I just don't : get it??? : Are there any recommended readings out there, that anyone could : recommend to at least bring my up to a third grade level on this stuff? : A search for "avionics for dummies", came up goose eggs! Trouble is that there is no "one true way" to install the stuff. There are generally enough connections included in all of the devices that there are different ways to accomplish the same thing. Judging by your statement he :Reception loss and sidetone loss at the same : time is the current prevolent symptom. At the occurence of failure, I : have reception loss and sidetone loss, I do have sidetone going : through the intercom though, as I can communicate with the passengers : fine. I'd say you've got a bad connection between the "audio out" of the radio and the COM[12] on the audio panel, or between the audio panel and the intercom. I would also speculate that the intercom is not producing sidetone, but the radio is... thus the loss of sidetone upon transmit, but the intercom remains functional. I don't specifically remember other details that may contradict this idea, but I'm sure they'll be pointed out to me by someone... ![]() -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#29
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: So, feeding the signal to the headphone line would automatically send
: the signal to all headphones on the intercom unless the intercom was in : Pilot ISO mode, if I understand correctly? I'm assuming this, since : the passengers can typically hear the radio calls I make. When I lose : sidetone (and reception), the passengers can't hear my xmissions : either, indicating, based on your response, that the signal is never : being fed out of the COM radio (or possibly the signal isn't even : getting to the COM radio). Am I catching on? Ah... you gotta be careful when you talk about intercoms. Sometimes they do some funky relay switching when the XMIT is hit. What it's probably doing (even when not in pilot ISO mode) is that it's disabling the intercom circuit. At the same time, it's routing the pilot MIC to the radio, but routing the sidetone (that is generated by the RADIO, not the intercom) out to all the pax's headsets. ... or at least that's what's supposed to be happening. As if that wasn't complicated enough, a flaky relay inside the intercom could cause all sorts of spastic and seamingly unrelated failures between XMIT and non-XMIT. : If the power supply to the radio was an issue, would that be evident in : the radio itself, such as led's dimming or loss of power? I never seem : to notice a visible issue with power, and if it's relevant, the NAV : side of the radio never seems to fail at all. I always have constant : indication of a tuned in VOR, regardless of issues I am having on the : COM side. Not likely given the swap-out... radio is likely blameless. : "The audio output path from the radio"... Would this be a coax cable : from the radio to the intercom? I recall seeing a box (2"x4" or so), : separate from the intercom, with coax from the radio to it... I tried : to trace where the coax went from there, but it seemed to be buried : deep inside a nest of other wires, so I gave up on trying to follow it. : If the radio behaves in another plane, I am assuming you are talking : about an audio output path that is not a part of the radio. So... : somewhere between the radio and the intercom then??? The audio output path from the radio is usually a "coax"... actually, a small shielded aircraft wire... definately NOT an antenna-looking RG-58-type wire. : "The antenna connection is broken/shorted" - I'm a little confused at : the likelyhood of this, because what I seem to be hearing in this and : previous posts is that the loss of sidetone likely rules out a : connection between the radio and the antenna. Maybe I'm not catching : on? ;-) Antenna likely vidicated before. : Slowly but surely, I think I'm getting it, but I still think one of you : guys could make a lot of money on an Avionics for Dummies book! I'd : buy it! ;-) The bitch of the avionics installs is getting the damn information you need. With install manuals for everything, it's usually pretty straight-forward. Without them, you're flying blind most of the time and things get mis-installed. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#30
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"George Patterson" wrote:
I'd put in rivnuts (as Jim suggested). There's entirely too much danger of epoxying the bolt into the nut. That's indeed Murphy's Law, but I'm assuming a 6 or 8-32 screw, not a bolt. But if you put a little auto wax on the screw, she'll come out if the goo oozed onto the threads. The screw doesn't have to be real tight during cure, and a regular nut + toothed lockwasher, not a self-locking nut, is preferred. After cure and removal of the screw, install the tray. Reg, Fred F. |
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