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#1
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Alternator whine
I'm looking for advice to help shorten the trouble-shooting process here.
My Arrow has developed an alternator whine over the past few hours. It is *barely, barely" noticable on both radios when receiving, but loud and obnoxious (both to me and other aircraft) when transmitting. No doubt it is the alternator - switching the alternator off fixes the problem. There do seem to be some variations - the noise is worse when transmitting on the pilot side than the copilot side. Worse when using the installed PTT and headset jacks than the mic. I've got an an old KMA-20 and a Sigtronics SPA400 intercom installed. Nothing has 'changed' recently. The alternator was replaced by an OH about 18 months/100 hours ago. The battery was replaced 4 months/25 hours ago at annual. Things were fine for the first 20 hours after annual. Because it was quick and easy, I cleaned the battery connections and the pins on the back of the KMA-20. No improvement. I'm time-constrained, and so would rather not have to make multiple trips to my AP and/or radio shop. Any informed guesses are more than appreciated. Thanks. |
#2
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Alternator whine
Best chance is an open diode in the rectifier bridge. There are a thousand
more automobile electrical repair shops than there are aviation electrical repair shops, and the replacement parts are mostly the same. I would NEVER suggest having an automobile shop work on an airplane part, but I've got this friend Ernie ... JIm "Dave Anderer" wrote in message news:2007031113571416807-danderer@udeledu... I'm looking for advice to help shorten the trouble-shooting process here. My Arrow has developed an alternator whine over the past few hours. It is *barely, barely" noticable on both radios when receiving, but loud and obnoxious (both to me and other aircraft) when transmitting. No doubt it is the alternator - switching the alternator off fixes the problem. |
#3
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Alternator whine
On 2007-03-11 14:20:46 -0400, "RST Engineering" said:
Best chance is an open diode in the rectifier bridge. There are a thousand more automobile electrical repair shops than there are aviation electrical repair shops, and the replacement parts are mostly the same. Thanks much Jim. I would NEVER suggest having an automobile shop work on an airplane part, but I've got this friend Ernie ... Heavens to Betsy, I'd never even think of such a thing... |
#4
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Alternator whine
Dave Anderer writes:
I'm looking for advice to help shorten the trouble-shooting process here. My Arrow has developed an alternator whine over the past few hours. It is *barely, barely" noticable on both radios when receiving, but loud and obnoxious (both to me and other aircraft) when transmitting. No doubt it is the alternator - switching the alternator off fixes the problem. So your first troubleshooting fork is this: 1) The alternator/charging system may be making more ripple than before. or 2) The ripple may be the same, but the comm system is doing a better job hearing it. For 1) two major suspects: a) Bad grounds. b) Bad diode{s}. b) Is easy to {dis}prove with a o-scope; without it takes some experience & judgement. One clue is it can't generate full current when loaded. a) is usually diagnosed by inspection and cleaning the connections; those being the battery ground, the alternator ground, the engine-to-frame ground, etc... 2) Note that while the alternator IS the source; it may not be at fault at all. The mike line should be grounded at one and ONLY one place... An added, improper ground on a mike jack may make a nasty ground loop. That can be as simple as the insulating washers having slipped. Mike jacks mounted in a metal panel may have insulating shoulder washers: --|-- --|--- washer | | \-- --/ w/shoulder -- -- -- -- metal panel -- -- /-- --\ | | --|-- --|-- The panel hole is bigger than the jack shaft. The shoulders sit in the hole; holding the jack's shell centered away from ground. -- A host is a host from coast to & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 |
#5
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Alternator whine
Is the whine worse at low RPM? Does the whine change pitch and/or volume
with RPM? If no to either one, it's not the alternator. Classic symptom of an open alternator diode is fairly loud, low pitch whine at idle. Increased frequency and lessor volume with increased RPM. Usually to the point where it is hardly detectable (at least to my non-dog ears) at high RPM. However, a bad connection to the battery or a bad battery will cause similar symptoms. More constant pitch that changes with electrical load is probably the regulator or, again, a bad connection to the battery. There are lots of nuances that can confuse the diagnosis. Most shops (that I've been to) are not skilled at trouble shooting. The complex relationship of the alternator, regulator, electrical grounding and battery cause most to just start replacing parts until the problem goes away. I had a whine last fall. Advice here was that it was not an open diode. I convinced myself that it was. Swapped out the alternator with a rebuilt and the problem went away. Of course, in the process, they disconnected the battery and all the connections to the alternator. I never will know for sure. ------------------------------- Travis Lake N3094P PWK "RST Engineering" wrote in message ... Best chance is an open diode in the rectifier bridge. There are a thousand more automobile electrical repair shops than there are aviation electrical repair shops, and the replacement parts are mostly the same. I would NEVER suggest having an automobile shop work on an airplane part, but I've got this friend Ernie ... JIm "Dave Anderer" wrote in message news:2007031113571416807-danderer@udeledu... I'm looking for advice to help shorten the trouble-shooting process here. My Arrow has developed an alternator whine over the past few hours. It is *barely, barely" noticable on both radios when receiving, but loud and obnoxious (both to me and other aircraft) when transmitting. No doubt it is the alternator - switching the alternator off fixes the problem. |
#6
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Alternator whine
A coup'la questions & comments:
1. Why would you disconnect the battery to replace the alternator? 2. One presumes certain basic troubleshooting procedures prior to throwing parts at the problem, like back all heavy nuts grounding the alternator, squirt in a little magic juice, and retighten. 3. You are correct. Most general aviation shops don't have the sophisticated tools to diagnose problems with alternators and regulators. A fairly large shop dedicated to nothing but alternators, regulators, and the like will. Most of these are in the automotive trade. 4. If the whine is coming mostly from the right front seat of the airplane, you might want to think about how long it has been since you took her to dinner {;-) Jim I had a whine last fall. Advice here was that it was not an open diode. I convinced myself that it was. Swapped out the alternator with a rebuilt and the problem went away. Of course, in the process, they disconnected the battery and all the connections to the alternator. I never will know for sure. |
#7
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Alternator whine
On 2007-03-12 09:11:59 -0400, "Travis Marlatte"
said: Classic symptom of an open alternator diode is fairly loud, low pitch whine at idle. Increased frequency and lessor volume with increased RPM. Usually to the point where it is hardly detectable (at least to my non-dog ears) at high RPM. Yup, that is pretty much it. Turns out my AP has a spare alternator in stock, so we can do a quick switch as a test. |
#8
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Alternator whine
"RST Engineering" wrote in message
... A coup'la questions & comments: 1. Why would you disconnect the battery to replace the alternator? I suspect it was in an attempt to reseat all connections that could contribute to the problem. I had already done this as well as "moving" all of the alternator mounting bolts. I didn't try any magic juice, however. 2. One presumes certain basic troubleshooting procedures prior to throwing parts at the problem, like back all heavy nuts grounding the alternator, squirt in a little magic juice, and retighten. I'll emphasize that I did my own diagnosis and concluded that it was an open diode. I took it to the shop not to have them diagnose but to swap the alternator - which they did quite well and it (or the process of doing it) solved the problem. ------------------------------- Travis Lake N3094P PWK |
#9
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Alternator whine
"Travis Marlatte" writes:
1. Why would you disconnect the battery to replace the alternator? I suspect it was in an attempt to reseat all connections that could contribute to the problem. I had already done this as well as "moving" all of the alternator mounting bolts. I didn't try any magic juice, however. A wise move... And I always pull the battery ground before I swap an alternator or such. Then, when I drop the wrench or such; that precaution cuts down on the "sparky-do's" as an old cow orker used to called it. I've no doubt it's now a Terrorist Act to take an aircraft alternator to an autoparts store for testing; but if it were from an airboat, [YES, that's it, an IO-540 in an airboat....] then you might go that route. The trouble is, will Al Autozone know how to hook up an alternator sans regulator? I wonder if aircraft will ever get internal regulators as cars have had for 20+ years. It really cuts down on the number of wires to come lose & cause weird grief... -- A host is a host from coast to & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 |
#10
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Alternator whine
"David Lesher" wrote in message ... And I always pull the battery ground before I swap an alternator or such. Then, when I drop the wrench or such; that precaution cuts down on the "sparky-do's" as an old cow orker used to called it. 'splain, Lucy, how you get sparky-do's with the master off and tagged? Especially if you are working by yourself. I've no doubt it's now a Terrorist Act to take an aircraft alternator to an autoparts store for testing I did NOT say take it to an autoparts store; please don't put words in my mouth. I said take it to a shop that specializes in automobile battery electrical systems. They are as far removed from an Autozone hamhand as a filet mignon is from a mcburger. ; but if it were from an airboat, [YES, that's it, an IO-540 in an airboat....] then you might go that route. The trouble is, will Al Autozone know how to hook up an alternator sans regulator? Probably not, but an automotive electric system specialist will...(s)he had to work on them 30 years ago and the test jig is still on the back shelf for Old Man Waverley's Studebaker that he brings in every 10 years or so. Jim |
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