A aviation & planes forum. AviationBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » AviationBanter forum » rec.aviation newsgroups » Owning
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

Transponder prob..



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old November 14th 05, 12:53 AM
Dave
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Transponder prob..

Had a strange one today..

While squawking IDENT , our "ident" stuck "on"

ATC confirmed we were continuously "identing"

Cycling the transponder to off then on again cleared the
ident fault.

Pressing the button again locks the ident light on again
until the power is cycled..

Any thoughts?

Switch appears mechanically OK, (clicks when pressed, clicks
when released)..

It is a King KT78 "KT76TSO"

Dave
  #2  
Old November 14th 05, 02:57 AM
TaxSrv
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Transponder prob..

"Dave" wrote:
While squawking IDENT , our "ident" stuck "on"

ATC confirmed we were continuously "identing"

Cycling the transponder to off then on again cleared the
ident fault.


The service manual sheds little light on the fault. So we start at
the switch, and then if OK note when that momentary switch is
closed, a pin on the big IC chip labeled IDENT is grounded. Could
be the chip, or the capacitor which sets the timing for the indent
to be on. It says this time is variable, suggesting a timing
capacitor somewhere (manual silent on this though). Will be
expensive to fix if the chip is bad, unless jiggling it in the chip
socket fixes it (if socketed).

Fred F.

  #3  
Old November 14th 05, 10:14 PM
Dave
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Transponder prob..

Yup... more info.. tech here says there is a timing circuit that
gets initialized when switched is closed. I can hear the switch
"click" off when released.. He suspects the IC or something
associated with it...

It is out and off to him now, will report results here when I
get the final result..

Here go more AMU's

Dave


On Sun, 13 Nov 2005 21:57:42 -0500, "TaxSrv"
wrote:

"Dave" wrote:
While squawking IDENT , our "ident" stuck "on"

ATC confirmed we were continuously "identing"

Cycling the transponder to off then on again cleared the
ident fault.


The service manual sheds little light on the fault. So we start at
the switch, and then if OK note when that momentary switch is
closed, a pin on the big IC chip labeled IDENT is grounded. Could
be the chip, or the capacitor which sets the timing for the indent
to be on. It says this time is variable, suggesting a timing
capacitor somewhere (manual silent on this though). Will be
expensive to fix if the chip is bad, unless jiggling it in the chip
socket fixes it (if socketed).

Fred F.


  #4  
Old November 14th 05, 11:23 PM
TaxSrv
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Transponder prob..

"Dave" wrote:
Yup... more info.. tech here says there is a timing circuit

that
gets initialized when switched is closed. I can hear the switch
"click" off when released.. He suspects the IC or something
associated with it...


The bummer about that the King VLSI chip is absolutely nothing in
function like the 3 gigahertz Pentium CPU in our now cheapie damn
computer, enormous heat sink now and all that. The service manuals
always say to suspect the big IC last. Disheartening, when you see
King's pricing on a 20-cent, common transistor. I was in an
avionics shop once, and spotted a bin of them common transistors.
Does FAA actually allow them to use those? And do they like just
bill $$ that way per invoice? Oh, the joys of owning airplanes
when it comes to genuine proprietary parts, the VLSI, in avionics
boxes we think are all that complicated, but to a good tech guy
really ain't.

Fred F.

  #5  
Old November 15th 05, 03:00 AM
soxinbox
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Transponder prob..

You can buy a cheap multimeter at radio shack for about 10 bucks. Put it on
continuity and you are good to go. I know it is not as fun as building it
yourself. Just think of it as a kit with one part.

"TaxSrv" wrote in message
...
"Dave" wrote:
Yup... more info.. tech here says there is a timing circuit

that
gets initialized when switched is closed. I can hear the switch
"click" off when released.. He suspects the IC or something
associated with it...


The bummer about that the King VLSI chip is absolutely nothing in
function like the 3 gigahertz Pentium CPU in our now cheapie damn
computer, enormous heat sink now and all that. The service manuals
always say to suspect the big IC last. Disheartening, when you see
King's pricing on a 20-cent, common transistor. I was in an
avionics shop once, and spotted a bin of them common transistors.
Does FAA actually allow them to use those? And do they like just
bill $$ that way per invoice? Oh, the joys of owning airplanes
when it comes to genuine proprietary parts, the VLSI, in avionics
boxes we think are all that complicated, but to a good tech guy
really ain't.

Fred F.



  #6  
Old November 21st 05, 03:43 AM posted to rec.aviation.owning
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Transponder prob..

Well....

Operational check today.. xponder working fine, Ident working
properly

Hopefully the whole thing certed next week

Ah.. joys of aircraft ownership...

Flew 3 hrs today...smooth air, working trip, 2 hrs flying instead of 5
hrs driving...Cher on the CD player....

Makes working on the weekend almost fun!

Dave



On Mon, 14 Nov 2005 18:23:10 -0500, "TaxSrv"
wrote:

"Dave" wrote:
Yup... more info.. tech here says there is a timing circuit

that
gets initialized when switched is closed. I can hear the switch
"click" off when released.. He suspects the IC or something
associated with it...


The bummer about that the King VLSI chip is absolutely nothing in
function like the 3 gigahertz Pentium CPU in our now cheapie damn
computer, enormous heat sink now and all that. The service manuals
always say to suspect the big IC last. Disheartening, when you see
King's pricing on a 20-cent, common transistor. I was in an
avionics shop once, and spotted a bin of them common transistors.
Does FAA actually allow them to use those? And do they like just
bill $$ that way per invoice? Oh, the joys of owning airplanes
when it comes to genuine proprietary parts, the VLSI, in avionics
boxes we think are all that complicated, but to a good tech guy
really ain't.

Fred F.


 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Washington DC airspace closing for good? tony roberts Piloting 153 August 11th 05 12:56 AM
Operation without a transponder flyer Piloting 11 September 14th 04 08:48 AM
Transponder test after static system opened? Jack I Owning 6 March 14th 04 03:09 PM
Transponder petition Ian Cant Soaring 11 February 28th 04 06:38 AM
More on transponder petition Ian Cant Soaring 1 February 27th 04 06:37 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:24 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 AviationBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.