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#61
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Jim Vincent wrote:
"Andy" wrote in message oups.com... If the battery is near death will it provide the current required by the upconverter? It's not magic and you can't get more power out of the upconverter than you put in. I'm curious to know if you have measured the performance with a "battery near death"? snip Haven't tested near death, but actually was part of the thinking. If the battery is near death, it has a little juice left. If the radio would not tolerate a low voltage, then I could upconvert. This is an interesting idea. By using 12 volts until the radio is close to unsatisfactory operation, you avoid the efficiency losses in the converter. At that voltage, you switch on the converter and make available the rest of the battery's capacity, though with a 10%-15% capacity loss in the converter. Still, you'd get 90+% of the battery's capacity, instead of 50% (or wherever your radio becomes unsatisfactory). This might be a solution for Udo, the original poster. I suggest he try the Datel converter (UHE-15/2000-Q12) mentioned by Tom Seim, as it is cheap, very small, totally enclosed, wide temperature range, and with excellent specifications for regulation, ripple, and overload/overvoltage protection. I can't guarantee it will work since I don't know of anyone that's tried it in a glider, but it's the one I'd get if I had Udo's problem. Of course, the converter would only be used to power the radio, not the other instruments. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
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#62
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David Kinsell wrote:
The truth is virtually no aircraft radios have upconverters built into them. They switch high currents at high voltage at low RF frequencies. A nasty thing to be building into a radio with a sensitive receiver. The converters put out harmonics from their high-power square waves going well into the aircraft band. I hadn't thought about the noise problem, but I can see it would be an issue. If they don't use converters, how do the newer radios manage so well on low voltages? For example, the Becker AR4201 is specified for 2 watts output at 10 volts, and the Dittel FSG 2T is specified from 11 to 16 volts, with 9 to 11 volts emergency operation. Too bad the Becker/Dittel engineers don't follow ras, but it does free them to design more stuff for us. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
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#63
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"Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... Jim Vincent wrote: "Andy" wrote in message oups.com... If the battery is near death will it provide the current required by the upconverter? It's not magic and you can't get more power out of the upconverter than you put in. I'm curious to know if you have measured the performance with a "battery near death"? snip Haven't tested near death, but actually was part of the thinking. If the battery is near death, it has a little juice left. If the radio would not tolerate a low voltage, then I could upconvert. This is an interesting idea. By using 12 volts until the radio is close to unsatisfactory operation, you avoid the efficiency losses in the converter. At that voltage, you switch on the converter and make available the rest of the battery's capacity, though with a 10%-15% capacity loss in the converter. Still, you'd get 90+% of the battery's capacity, instead of 50% (or wherever your radio becomes unsatisfactory). This might be a solution for Udo, the original poster. I suggest he try the Datel converter (UHE-15/2000-Q12) mentioned by Tom Seim, as it is cheap, very small, totally enclosed, wide temperature range, and with excellent specifications for regulation, ripple, and overload/overvoltage protection. I can't guarantee it will work since I don't know of anyone that's tried it in a glider, but it's the one I'd get if I had Udo's problem. Of course, the converter would only be used to power the radio, not the other instruments. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA I'm a little concerned about hitting the system with 15V. Be sure to check the voltage operating ranges of all your gear. If you find you're constrained to a lower voltage, you then have two options. First, get the 15 V model and use the trim function to bring it down by 5% to 14.25 V or secondly use a 12 V model trimmed up to by 5% to 12.6 V. The trim is easily configured using resistors or potentiometers. |
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#64
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Jim Vincent wrote:
This might be a solution for Udo, the original poster. I suggest he try the Datel converter (UHE-15/2000-Q12) mentioned by Tom Seim, as it is cheap, very small, totally enclosed, wide temperature range, and with excellent specifications for regulation, ripple, and overload/overvoltage protection. I can't guarantee it will work since I don't know of anyone that's tried it in a glider, but it's the one I'd get if I had Udo's problem. Of course, the converter would only be used to power the radio, not the other instruments. I'm a little concerned about hitting the system with 15V. Be sure to check the voltage operating ranges of all your gear. If you find you're constrained to a lower voltage, you then have two options. First, get the 15 V model and use the trim function to bring it down by 5% to 14.25 V or secondly use a 12 V model trimmed up to by 5% to 12.6 V. The trim is easily configured using resistors or potentiometers. Yes, 14.25 should be fine, since a fully charged 14 volt battery is almost 15 volts. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
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#65
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Eric Greenwell wrote:
David Kinsell wrote: The truth is virtually no aircraft radios have upconverters built into them. They switch high currents at high voltage at low RF frequencies. A nasty thing to be building into a radio with a sensitive receiver. The converters put out harmonics from their high-power square waves going well into the aircraft band. I hadn't thought about the noise problem, but I can see it would be an issue. If they don't use converters, how do the newer radios manage so well on low voltages? For example, the Becker AR4201 is specified for 2 watts output at 10 volts, I don't know where you saw that. On their web site, they list the input voltage as 12.4 to 15.1 volts, with emergency operation only down to 10 volts. and the Dittel FSG 2T is specified from 11 to 16 volts, with 9 to 11 volts emergency operation. Yep. In their literature, they also say you must have at least 11.0 volts during transmit. Sounds like two radios designed for 14 volt operation, just like always. I wonder how long a 12 volt battery mounted in the tail is going to supply 12.4 volts to the Becker?? 10 minutes maybe, if you've got good wiring?? I expect Becker is just a little more honest with their specs, rather than really being different than the Dittel. Too bad the Becker/Dittel engineers don't follow ras, but it does free them to design more stuff for us. You've got to keep in mind the soaring market is peanuts compared to the power market, so that's why radios have been, and still today are designed to the 14 volt standard. Why put a switching converter in a radio that's sitting there all day long with a well-regulated, very stout 14.2 volt supply? -Dave |
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#66
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Paul Remde wrote:
Hi, It is my belief that all the work required to make an "upconverter" will lead to only minimal increases in your radios transmit power (10 to 20%?). It doesn't seem worth it to me. I vote 12V. Paul Remde 10-20%??? A discharged 12 volt battery is going to be around 10.5 volts, with maybe half a volt lost in the wiring and fuses. The upconverter can comfortably be set to 15 volts. The RF voltage follows the supply, so it'll be 50% higher. Since the power is the square of the voltage, you're looking at more than double the transmit power. But the power isn't the big issue, it's the distortion you get at lower voltage. Many radios sound really bad on transmit at 11 volts, and shut down entirely at about 10 volts. Since they're 14 volt radios, that shouldn't be surprising, should it? I just wish glider pilots had to listen to their own transmissions, there's some really bad sounding radios on the air. Upconverters aren't a bad idea, except for the potential for interference in the cockpit. It's kind of a silly misuse of technology to be using something like this, when it's so easy to get the proper voltage from a battery. I've got nothing against them, I've designed them into commercial products where appropriate, but this just isn't the best place for them. -Dave |
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#67
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Andy wrote:
It's probably also worth noting that a 14volt pack hot off the charger has a terminal voltage greater than 15 volts and will exceed the maximum voltage specs for many modern glider systems. Andy Maybe for a few minutes, if you take it off the charger and run to the plane and immediately install it and turn it on. I've never seen more than 14.8 volts with a more normal installation. If you read your manuals, avionics have max voltages of 16 or 16.5 volts, so it doesn't seem to be an issue. -Dave |
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#68
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David Kinsell wrote:
I hadn't thought about the noise problem, but I can see it would be an issue. If they don't use converters, how do the newer radios manage so well on low voltages? For example, the Becker AR4201 is specified for 2 watts output at 10 volts, I don't know where you saw that. On their web site, they list the input voltage as 12.4 to 15.1 volts, with emergency operation only down to 10 volts. It's in the manual, page 1-3. and the Dittel FSG 2T is specified from 11 to 16 volts, with 9 to 11 volts emergency operation. Yep. In their literature, they also say you must have at least 11.0 volts during transmit. A 12 volt battery can put out 11 volts. Sounds like two radios designed for 14 volt operation, just like always. Not "just like always": The older radios can't come close to the specs for these radios. I wonder how long a 12 volt battery mounted in the tail is going to supply 12.4 volts to the Becker?? 10 minutes maybe, if you've got good wiring?? I expect Becker is just a little more honest with their specs, rather than really being different than the Dittel. Too bad the Becker/Dittel engineers don't follow ras, but it does free them to design more stuff for us. You've got to keep in mind the soaring market is peanuts compared to the power market, so that's why radios have been, and still today are designed to the 14 volt standard. Except handhelds, of course, of which tons are sold. Maybe some of that design technology is creeping into the panel mounts. Why put a switching converter in a radio that's sitting there all day long with a well-regulated, very stout 14.2 volt supply? Because it's easy to do? Because the generator might quit? Because you can sell a few more radios to folks like us? I keep hoping an engineer with some detail design knowledge of these radios will hop in here and tell us, but no luck yet. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
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#69
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Actually.the Walter Dittel FSG2T and previous models FSG70/71 do in fact
have some more sophisticated circuitry that does allow it to operate at a lower voltage than the Becker does and both are a bit more sophisticated than others like Avionic Dittel, Filser and Microairs (just to name a few). Any of these radios will operate at lower voltages at some reduction in TX output power.but all have more than enough Tx power for our purposes anyway....you will notice at very low voltages microphone audio becoming distorted as a first indication that the input voltage has depleted too far and though at this point it's already too low a battery capacity and will soon become worthless anyway.......and at that point only PFM would allow it to function acceptably, it becomes rather relative.no battery left..no radio tim Wings & Wheels www.wingsandwheels.com "David Kinsell" wrote in message ... Eric Greenwell wrote: David Kinsell wrote: The truth is virtually no aircraft radios have upconverters built into them. They switch high currents at high voltage at low RF frequencies. A nasty thing to be building into a radio with a sensitive receiver. The converters put out harmonics from their high-power square waves going well into the aircraft band. I hadn't thought about the noise problem, but I can see it would be an issue. If they don't use converters, how do the newer radios manage so well on low voltages? For example, the Becker AR4201 is specified for 2 watts output at 10 volts, I don't know where you saw that. On their web site, they list the input voltage as 12.4 to 15.1 volts, with emergency operation only down to 10 volts. and the Dittel FSG 2T is specified from 11 to 16 volts, with 9 to 11 volts emergency operation. Yep. In their literature, they also say you must have at least 11.0 volts during transmit. Sounds like two radios designed for 14 volt operation, just like always. I wonder how long a 12 volt battery mounted in the tail is going to supply 12.4 volts to the Becker?? 10 minutes maybe, if you've got good wiring?? I expect Becker is just a little more honest with their specs, rather than really being different than the Dittel. Too bad the Becker/Dittel engineers don't follow ras, but it does free them to design more stuff for us. You've got to keep in mind the soaring market is peanuts compared to the power market, so that's why radios have been, and still today are designed to the 14 volt standard. Why put a switching converter in a radio that's sitting there all day long with a well-regulated, very stout 14.2 volt supply? -Dave |
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#70
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As an aside--I have a Dittel FSG71M in the portable base station case(the PS
model) with battery and charger built in. It works very nicely. It has a 12v 7.5 ah battery---factory designed and integrated. This is a "spare no expense" outfit and I think the Dittel engineers would make it any voltage they wanted. -- Hartley Falbaum "Tim Mara" wrote in message ... Actually.the Walter Dittel FSG2T and previous models FSG70/71 do in fact have some more sophisticated circuitry that does allow it to operate at a lower voltage than the Becker does and both are a bit more sophisticated than others like Avionic Dittel, Filser and Microairs (just to name a few). Any of these radios will operate at lower voltages at some reduction in TX output power.but all have more than enough Tx power for our purposes anyway....you will notice at very low voltages microphone audio becoming distorted as a first indication that the input voltage has depleted too far and though at this point it's already too low a battery capacity and will soon become worthless anyway.......and at that point only PFM would allow it to function acceptably, it becomes rather relative.no battery left..no radio tim Wings & Wheels www.wingsandwheels.com "David Kinsell" wrote in message ... Eric Greenwell wrote: David Kinsell wrote: The truth is virtually no aircraft radios have upconverters built into them. They switch high currents at high voltage at low RF frequencies. A nasty thing to be building into a radio with a sensitive receiver. The converters put out harmonics from their high-power square waves going well into the aircraft band. I hadn't thought about the noise problem, but I can see it would be an issue. If they don't use converters, how do the newer radios manage so well on low voltages? For example, the Becker AR4201 is specified for 2 watts output at 10 volts, I don't know where you saw that. On their web site, they list the input voltage as 12.4 to 15.1 volts, with emergency operation only down to 10 volts. and the Dittel FSG 2T is specified from 11 to 16 volts, with 9 to 11 volts emergency operation. Yep. In their literature, they also say you must have at least 11.0 volts during transmit. Sounds like two radios designed for 14 volt operation, just like always. I wonder how long a 12 volt battery mounted in the tail is going to supply 12.4 volts to the Becker?? 10 minutes maybe, if you've got good wiring?? I expect Becker is just a little more honest with their specs, rather than really being different than the Dittel. Too bad the Becker/Dittel engineers don't follow ras, but it does free them to design more stuff for us. You've got to keep in mind the soaring market is peanuts compared to the power market, so that's why radios have been, and still today are designed to the 14 volt standard. Why put a switching converter in a radio that's sitting there all day long with a well-regulated, very stout 14.2 volt supply? -Dave |
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