I came up with a working fix for the inadequate 20 Amp AeroVee alternator. Here is what I did.
I purchased an Ultima 32 Amp Heavy Duty charging system. (used on late 90's to early 2000's Harley Sportster). This included a new regulator. It is quite a bit bigger so required some Yankee engineering. Guess that's why we fly "experimental" aircraft!
- Old vs New.jpg (51.9 KiB) Viewed 10958 times
I purchase a 1.5" thick spacer to get the rotor to run outside of the accessory case.
- Spacer .jpg (30.74 KiB) Viewed 10958 times
This spacer had a flange on one side that I had the center of the rotor machined out to fit over. This helped to keep everything concentric. (VERY important) I then drilled the holes through the rotor and spacer to match the ones in the original rotor so it would all attach to the crankshaft as did the original. This was the most difficult part of the operation. Keeping everything concentric is critical so there are no bad vibrations. Attach the rotor to the flywheel first using high grade machine screws.
- Rotor Attached (2).jpg (50.19 KiB) Viewed 10958 times
Then attach the original E-mag trigger plate and shaft to/through the rotor with longer (again) high grade structural screws that go all the way into the flywheel.
- E-mag trigger shaft.jpg (40.29 KiB) Viewed 10958 times
I fabricated an outer and inner ring to attach the new stator and E-mag plate to the accessory case. I had to make 1.7" spacers to attach to this outer ring to get it to clear the larger new rotor.
- E-mag adapter ring .jpg (26.91 KiB) Viewed 10958 times
- Stator adapter 2.jpg (13.29 KiB) Viewed 10849 times
I lined everything up and drilled/tapped holes into the accessory case to secure the stator/E-mag assembly to the case. Again, assuring concentricity is critical. Make sure everything rotates without any contact issues.
- Final install .jpg (48.58 KiB) Viewed 10958 times
Another note: I had to rotate the starter 180 degrees so the drive unit would clear the larger rotor.
I now have 13.0 volts at idle and 14.2 volts at any RPM above 1500. I'm happy! My plane is happy!
PLEASE READ THIS! You can do what I did, but I would highly recommend that you pull your engine, remove the accessory plate (X-plate) and mill that out to fit the larger rotor inside the case as with the original. Doing this on the aircraft was far more work and very difficult to keep everything concentric and lined up. My thought was to do this for now and then mill the plate out the next time I have the engine off and make it more professional at that point. Take my advice and do it right from the beginning. This took me weeks when I could have done it in days had I just pulled the engine.