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Recently, Snowbird posted:
"Neil Gould" wrote ... Does the aircraft have an ampmeter? Again according to the AFM, yes, but notably, it is not on the MFD's default engine display page but on the "System" page together with the voltmeters. You need to push a button to see it. However, the checklist requires you to have a look at the "System" page after engine start as well as before take-off, so if the checklist is followed a fault would not go unnoticed. I would think that this preflight requirement has implications for this accident. In the other scenario posited by the article, i.e. an unconnected main battery, things become interesting. In this scenario the ammeters would presumably show "normal" values, i.e the instantaneous consumption of the electrical devices. If the alternators are working, the ammeters should show a higher than normal postive value, as the battery is not putting a normal load on the charging system. That, too, would stop me from taking off. In this case the voltmeter would really be essential . The AFM says about the voltmeters: "Under normal operating conditions the alternator voltage is shown, otherwise it displays the 'main'-battery voltage." So the voltmeters presumably measure the bus voltage, and in this scenario (battery disconnected) they would probably show an abnormal voltage which could alert the pilot. I'm no expert here, but I seem to recall stories of batteries failing in-flight and how that can be seen from the voltmeter. Hmm. I'd think the alternator voltage would always be shown unless the engines aren't running, and then the bus voltage is shown. A look at the schematic could reveal which case is correct. Also, in this case, there seems to be no way of positively checking the actual, pure main battery voltage, because according to the schematic the main battery relay needs power from the battery itself to operate and connect to the battery bus. Or then I'm missing something...... I'd think that checking when the engines are not running would show the main battery voltage level. If the battery is dead, of course, the relay wouldn't have power to connect to the bus. Neil |
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