Nuckolls Crossbar Overvoltage Over Voltage
Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2017 1:56 am
Builders/Pilots
I would much appreciate diagnosis tips on the following:
I have an Aerovee in Xenos 32XS. It has a Bob Nucholls designed Crossbar Overvoltage Protection circuit that drives a yellow warning light and a 5A circuit breaker with manual reset that is supposed to clear the indicator. While taxiing the warning light came on and stayed on. The reset switch has no effect on the warning light. (That reset circuit breaker seems likely to be working properly, since neither disconnecting it or bridging it - for a split second - has any effect on the warning light.) This Overvoltage system apparently worked without incident from 2010 thru 2015
I wonder if someone has a suggestion about where to start: alternator failure, regulator failure, reset breaker, other?
My default plan is to replace the regulator and measure its output. Then measure the alternator output.
(I ran the engine a very short time with the yellow light on, and it sounded normal, restarted easily.) I didn't run the engine long enough to judge for certain whether the battery was charging. The battery is at a normal voltage: 13.0.)
Thank you for any suggestions.
(Associated question: I cannot remember whether the overvoltage yellow warning light always comes on with the master switches, and then sometime after the engine starts, it ordinarily goes out)?
Peter Schwenn
I would much appreciate diagnosis tips on the following:
I have an Aerovee in Xenos 32XS. It has a Bob Nucholls designed Crossbar Overvoltage Protection circuit that drives a yellow warning light and a 5A circuit breaker with manual reset that is supposed to clear the indicator. While taxiing the warning light came on and stayed on. The reset switch has no effect on the warning light. (That reset circuit breaker seems likely to be working properly, since neither disconnecting it or bridging it - for a split second - has any effect on the warning light.) This Overvoltage system apparently worked without incident from 2010 thru 2015
I wonder if someone has a suggestion about where to start: alternator failure, regulator failure, reset breaker, other?
My default plan is to replace the regulator and measure its output. Then measure the alternator output.
(I ran the engine a very short time with the yellow light on, and it sounded normal, restarted easily.) I didn't run the engine long enough to judge for certain whether the battery was charging. The battery is at a normal voltage: 13.0.)
Thank you for any suggestions.
(Associated question: I cannot remember whether the overvoltage yellow warning light always comes on with the master switches, and then sometime after the engine starts, it ordinarily goes out)?
Peter Schwenn