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Minimum ANL size of 35A vs. power feed AWG

 
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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Sat Apr 11, 2020 9:22 am    Post subject: Minimum ANL size of 35A vs. power feed AWG Reply with quote

At 06:30 PM 4/10/2020, you wrote:
Quote:
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "Colyn Case" <colyncase(at)earthlink.net>

I can see the logic of that. However, if you abide that logic you
probably wouldn't put any current limiters in your airplane at all, right?

It's the same logic that specified sizes
and materials of bolts that hold the wings
on, optimizes engine oil for best service
life and strives for failure tolerant
electrical system architecture.

Quote:
I think the guys that made my Nissan Stanza thought something
like that. One day for no reason that I could find, the
electrical system fried itself, burned through a fender and
destroyed the entire wiring harness in the car.

The arcing burned through sheet steel
while partitioning off enough energy
to burn every wired in the car?

Quote:
Fortunately, shortly into the episode,

'Shortly'? The events described above
take quite a bit of time . . . how
long was 'shortly'?

Quote:
someone had the presence of mind to grab one of
the cables connected to the battery and simply pull it off.

Loose enough to be disconnected with
bare hands? I'm having difficulty
wrapping my gray matter around the
physics of this event.


Quote:
Not something I would enjoy doing at 20,000'

Building a pressurized airplane . . . or
are you planning an oxygen system? What
kind of cabin heat do you anticipate?


Bob . . .


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nuckolls.bob(at)aeroelect
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PostPosted: Sat Apr 11, 2020 10:35 am    Post subject: Minimum ANL size of 35A vs. power feed AWG Reply with quote

At 07:45 AM 4/11/2020, you wrote:
Quote:
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "Colyn Case" <colyncase(at)earthlink.net>

Thinking about this a little differently: When the wires are sized, they are sized for voltage drop vs. current and distance. Tables for calculating that are widely available. Typically we apply a fuse or breaker to allow the current used in that calculation.

That breaker size is way way lower than the current required to compromise the insulating properties of the insulation.

Circuit protection will operate wwwayyyyy before the insulation
is at-risk. A 22AWG wire will carry 20 amps in room air and
still be far short of damaging insulation . . . 5A circuit
protection makes risk-to-insulation still more remote.

The vast majority of bad days in the cockpit
are the result of poor piloting. Only a
few are the result of mechanical failure
and fewer still involve electrical failure.

Of ALL electrical failures, death by 'unprotected'
wires are a vanishingly small proportion.
SwissAir 111 comes to mind . . . that WAS
a compounded series of catastrophic design snafus.

But for your personal airborne recreational vehicle,
I suggest you're over thinking the problem.


Bob . . .


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Colyn Case



Joined: 12 Oct 2009
Posts: 13
Location: Thetford Center

PostPosted: Thu Apr 16, 2020 8:44 pm    Post subject: Re: Minimum ANL size of 35A vs. power feed AWG Reply with quote

Hi Bob,

I apologize for my somewhat wise-ass answer to Joe's post. Clearly I have a lot to learn.

We always fight the last war and my last war was smoke coming from behind the panel that someone else wired. I could barely even get a look in there let alone identify the offending part. My response is I am now rewiring the airplane. Hence lots of questioning.

It is a Lancair IV-P, usually overheated by the sun but manmade heat is from the output of the turbos.

What prompted this question is that I ended up with a co-pilot side CB panel. All the feeds from the firewall go there. ...and then I have a console CB panel where all the important stuff is. The main bus comes through the firewall as a 6 AWG wire and goes to the side CB panel. From there it goes to the center CB panel. On the latter, I can conjure up 67 continuous amps. But that assumes hydraulic pump is at max pressure and stays there (I've never seen it there for more than 2 seconds), pitot heat is on, TKS pump is on, my ancient strobes, incandescent nav lights, HID landing lights, incandesent taxi lights, the COM is transmitting. ...a situation that never happens.

It's about an 8' run over to the center CB, but even at that imaginary 67 amp load, on this 28V airplane, I could in theory handle it with an 8 AWG wire from the side CB panel to the center CB panel. ...but that would burn through before the ANL interrupted.

So you are saying, don't worry about the ANL. Can I also not worry about maintaining 6 AWG all the way to the center CB panel?

While we're at it, I have a 27 amp "E-bus". (Yes I know that is extreme but really that's my whole g3xtouch system with all its canbus friends and relatives includeing the eis and auto pilot) Today I broke one of the diodes that feeds it and am looking for some replqcements. How do I identify those at digikey or wherever?


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 17, 2020 8:31 am    Post subject: Minimum ANL size of 35A vs. power feed AWG Reply with quote

Quote:
It's about an 8' run over to the center CB, but even at that imaginary 67 amp load, on this 28V airplane, I could in theory handle it with an 8 AWG wire from the side CB panel to the center CB panel. ...but that would burn through before the ANL interrupted.

So you are saying, don't worry about the ANL. Can I also not worry about maintaining 6 AWG all the way to the center CB panel?

You're over-worrying it. Drop the wire gage for the
last leg of the trip to center panel. Ditch the
ANL.

Quote:
While we're at it, I have a 27 amp "E-bus". (Yes I know that is extreme but really that's my whole g3xtouch system with all its canbus friends and relatives includeing the eis and auto pilot) Today I broke one of the diodes that feeds it and am looking for some replqcements. How do I identify those at digikey or wherever?

Is this a bridge rectifier type? Just
about anything that LOOKS like it
will do. Voltage rating is not
terribly significant in the 28v
system. Current rating is more significant.

HOWEVER, with this much
current through the device, I'd
plan on some heat sinking . . . say
36 square inches of aluminum sheet
or equivalent.

You can 'kill' a 50A rated diode
with 30A flowing if it's not
heat sinked.

Here's a likely candidate:

https://tinyurl.com/yahl74yy




Bob . . .


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 17, 2020 2:38 pm    Post subject: Minimum ANL size of 35A vs. power feed AWG Reply with quote

Quote:
It's about an 8' run over to the center CB, but even at that imaginary 67 amp load, on this 28V airplane


Really? Have you conducted a load analysis?
This isn't a 'conjuring' activity, it's
a numerical analysis of your architecture,
component sizing, failure modes and crafting
of plan-B etc.

You can do this on a spread-sheet . . . there
are several examples in Excel to be had
at

https://tinyurl.com/9rt6ymn

but my personal favorite is the hand-entered
and edited chart

https://tinyurl.com/7jqypwj

One sheet per bus. Each line depicts
a accessory feeder. You pick the protection
size (either fuse or breaker . . . don't
fuss over the symbol, just get a number
on it). Pick the wire size. Then fill in
the boxes as to the current draw for
each accessory in the flight conditions
called out across the top.

When I do a wirebook, the architecture
drawing comes first then these pages
follow. I had a column to call out the
page on which that accessory's wiring
details are called out.

Hence, the architecture and loads
pages become the foundation and index
to the whole system which gets added
on subsequent pages.

I'm a bit perplexed by that 67A assertion
above . . . I'd like to know how
that was arrived at . . . you really
NEED to know that the number(s)
are golden.


Bob . . .


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