I tried to go for a brief flight this evening and found that gremlins have apparently invaded my electrical system. I last flew about a week ago - a brief 30 minute flight around the area. Everything worked as expected.
When I fired up this evening, the battery was a bit weak - took a few more blades than usual. I had done a bit of avionics testing and chalked the weak battery up to having used a few more amps than I thought.
Once the engine was turning as normal I flipped on the avionics master and... crickets. The avionics master controls an automotive relay that feeds power from the main bus to the avionics bus. (See the attached diagram.) Apparently the relay didn't close, so no juice to the avionics bus.
I snapped the avionics master back off and then turned off the master switch. The master bus remained hot (the alternator was live, and the ALT Field is controlled by a separate breaker). I snapped the avionics master back on and all the avionics went live.
Snapped the master switch back on, re-connecting the battery. Then I tried to turn on the strobes (powered from the master bus) and the avionics all went off.
I repeated this several times, and it seems that with the batter and alternator both connected to the master bus, any significant change in the load causes the avionics master relay to open - and remain open until cycled.
I shut down, pushed it back into the hangar and charged the battery for an hour. Tested everything off of the battery (engine / alternator off) and no problems: I could add and remove load without having any impact on the avionics relay. Everything worked as expected.
I hauled it back out, fired it back up (started immediately) and... same thing. Avionics don't want to come on line or stay on line.
I tested the relay and it checks out on the bench - closes at about 8v. Draws about 0.1 amp at 12v. No resistance on the switched path.
I tested the avionics master switch - grounds the relay coil as expected.
This same configuration has been working for about two years now with no issues.
Anyone have a guess what's going on?
When I fired up this evening, the battery was a bit weak - took a few more blades than usual. I had done a bit of avionics testing and chalked the weak battery up to having used a few more amps than I thought.
Once the engine was turning as normal I flipped on the avionics master and... crickets. The avionics master controls an automotive relay that feeds power from the main bus to the avionics bus. (See the attached diagram.) Apparently the relay didn't close, so no juice to the avionics bus.
I snapped the avionics master back off and then turned off the master switch. The master bus remained hot (the alternator was live, and the ALT Field is controlled by a separate breaker). I snapped the avionics master back on and all the avionics went live.
Snapped the master switch back on, re-connecting the battery. Then I tried to turn on the strobes (powered from the master bus) and the avionics all went off.
I repeated this several times, and it seems that with the batter and alternator both connected to the master bus, any significant change in the load causes the avionics master relay to open - and remain open until cycled.
I shut down, pushed it back into the hangar and charged the battery for an hour. Tested everything off of the battery (engine / alternator off) and no problems: I could add and remove load without having any impact on the avionics relay. Everything worked as expected.
I hauled it back out, fired it back up (started immediately) and... same thing. Avionics don't want to come on line or stay on line.
I tested the relay and it checks out on the bench - closes at about 8v. Draws about 0.1 amp at 12v. No resistance on the switched path.
I tested the avionics master switch - grounds the relay coil as expected.
This same configuration has been working for about two years now with no issues.
Anyone have a guess what's going on?