This is a great reply and (I believe) exactly what is happening. I am reading a voltage drop but not significant at the g3x screen readout. I will put a good multimeter on the pmag wire itself and see what is going on. At first, I just couldn’t believe voltage was an issue because the battery is cranking the engine quite well. BTW, Brad at Pmag suggested the exact same thing.I had a similar experience with my -10.
Walt and some others hit on it....bus voltage during start. My symptoms also started after 40 hours or so.
You can't see it clearly on most monitor systems, but if your battery(s) are getting to be something other than brand new, your bus voltage can easily drop below 10V for that split second that the starter is pushing a piston thru its compression stroke. That is the same time when the PMAG is preparing to fire a spark (TDC for starting). If the ship's voltage to the PMAG drops much below 10 volts, NO SPARK IS SENT.
I bet $5 that your "backfire" was a spark (waste type) that actually fired AFTER you released the start switch when the voltage returned north of 10 volts.
Find a 12v source of some kind that's not the aircraft battery and directly power a PMAG for a starting test. Make sure that test battery is powering only the PMAG and not back feeding anything. If it fires right up regularly, you have found the culprit.
I have spoken with Brad at EMAG about this issue. I was hoping they could design a capacitor with a diode setup to keep the voltage up on these things for start, but no luck.
My first attempt at a fix was to power my panel buses directly from the battery contactor using a #6 wire versus taking it from the side of the engine starter solenoid. That raised the panel voltage some at start, but the problem still existed intermittently.
My next solution was to put a receptacle under the instrument panel that would accept a plug from a cheap power pack of 8 AA batteries found on Amazon. This directly powered a PMAG. (Remember to turn ship's power off when starting so that your battery pack is supplying power only to the PMAG.) After start, unplug the battery pack and turn on ship's power.
After a while I went with a more permanent solution...I put the PMAG ship's power on a "Conditioned Bus" that is powered by a TCW unit that keeps that bus powered at 12V during start. No problems since.
DCBROWN- WHAT IS A “CONDITIONED BUSS” AND HOW CAN I make one? If this is the problem I would like a more permanent solution then wiring a battery pack up under the dash.
Thanks for the replies. And YES. I did ohm the plugs before install and twice after the issue started. I also switched back to the old plugs to see.
Lastly, I will be going over all wiring and connections between battery and pmags. Thanks.
