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		Dennis Johnson
 
 
  Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 89 Location: N. Calif.
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				 Posted: Sun Aug 17, 2008 8:45 am    Post subject: Landing Light Pops Breaker | 
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				The April issue of EAA's Sport Aviation magazine had a "technical"  column about an airplane that regularly popped the landing light circuit  breaker.  The author said he found several high resistance connections in  the circuit and solved the problem by cleaning those connections and making them  low resistance.  The current issue, August, has an excellent letter to  the editor that questions how a high resistance connection (presumably not at  the circuit breaker's terminals) could cause a high amperage condition that  would trip the breaker. 
   
  When I read the original article, I also didn't understand how a high  resistance connection could increase the amperage in a landing light circuit and  just figured that it was yet another example of bad advice in a Sport Aviation  "technical" article.  I enjoy the magazine, but I have found so much faulty  technical information in it that I don't pay much attention to their technical  articles.
   
  However, the author's response to the question reiterated  that a high resistance connection can increase the amperage enough to cause the  circuit breaker to trip.  
   
  I'm a beginner on things like this, but I've studied Bob's book and this  newsgroup since beginning my homebuilt project five years ago, and  cannot understand how the author could be right.  However, I've  learned from this list that some components try to consume constant power and  that reducing the voltage to them increases the current in order to keep  the power constant.  But I think a tungsten filament landing light is a  simple resistor (although very temperature sensitive).  I think if I put a  resistor in series with a landing light, the amps would go down, not up, and the  amount of light produced would decrease.  
   
  So what's the truth?  And why?
   
  Best,
  Dennis
  Lancair Legacy, 150 hours, did all my own wiring (also assembly, body-work,  paint, instrument panel, etc)   
     [quote][b]
 
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		Joemotis(at)aol.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Aug 17, 2008 10:12 am    Post subject: Landing Light Pops Breaker | 
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				That's easy, how about if the landing light is turned on and is  pulling maximum amps on a cold filament,
  meanwhile that high resistance connection upstream is starting to get hot  and arc and spark...Those values added together are greater than the   circuit breakers rating..
   
  Joe Motis
  Do not archive
 
 Looking for a car that's sporty, fun and fits in your budget? Read reviews on AOL Autos.
   [quote][b]
 
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		nuckolls.bob(at)cox.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Aug 17, 2008 4:20 pm    Post subject: Landing Light Pops Breaker | 
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				At 09:38 AM 8/17/2008 -0700, you wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  The April issue of EAA's Sport Aviation magazine had a "technical" column 
 about an airplane that regularly popped the landing light circuit 
 breaker.  The author said he found several high resistance connections in 
 the circuit and solved the problem by cleaning those connections and 
 making them low resistance.  The current issue, August, has an excellent 
 letter to the editor that questions how a high resistance connection 
 (presumably not at the circuit breaker's terminals) could cause a high 
 amperage condition that would trip the breaker.
 
 When I read the original article, I also didn't understand how a high 
 resistance connection could increase the amperage in a landing light 
 circuit and just figured that it was yet another example of bad advice in 
 a Sport Aviation "technical" article.  I enjoy the magazine, but I have 
 found so much faulty technical information in it that I don't pay much 
 attention to their technical articles.
 
 | 	  
    Understand . . . and agree. I quit writing for S.A. some
    years ago after an article I reviewed for Jack Cox wound up
    getting published anyhow. See:
 
 http://aeroelectric.com/articles/rules/review.html
 
    S.A. used to be the flagship publication of EAA and
    dedicated to the best we know how to do. Sadly, it
    now seems to be a cash cow for advertising sales
    and a venue where wanna-be's get published. When
    you have a high-volume, directed-market technical
    publication that won't even pay a rudimentary writer's
    fee or seek peer review of articles . . . well . . .
    what you see is what you get.
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  
 However, the author's response to the question reiterated that a
 high resistance connection can increase the amperage enough to
 cause the circuit breaker to trip.
 
 
 | 	  
    Good for you! I don't know how many times I've seen
    words in ostensibly authoritative works that suggest
    "cleaning and re-tightening" junctions in order to
    cure a variety of ills . . . including the opening of
    breakers or fuses. See bottom of page 4 and top of
    5 on . . .
 
 http://www.aeroelectric.com/articles/richter/response_2.pdf
 
    and upper left corner of page 2
 
 http://www.aeroelectric.com/articles/Wired_for_Disaster.pdf
 
    These words are written by folks who's esteem in
    our society has been artificially elevated for
    reasons other than their understanding of physics
    and practical processes.
 
    Unless a high resistance junction is showing signs
    of impending failure due to heating . . . then its
    effects are limited simply to increasing path resistance.
 
    An increase in path resistance LOWERS overall power
    consumed by devices on that pathway . . . but indeed
    may concentrate power dissipation (heating) in a
    localized area (joints, worn contacts) that precipitate
    a failure at that location . . . but it certainly doesn't
    cause breakers to open. Unless . . .
 
    Here's a case where a switch failure DID first manifest
    itself by opening a breaker . . . when it was TURNED
    OFF. See:
 
 http://www.aeroelectric.com/articles/Anatomy_of_a_Switch_Failure/Anatomy_of_a_Switch_Failure.html
 
    Of course, this was a double failure . . . the switch
    had not yet failed to conduct in the closed position
    . . .  but heating effects induced a second failure.
    A distortion of the internal parts that ultimately
    produced the short that tripped the breaker.
 
    We've studied on these pages how an increased path
    resistance contributes to instability of the voltage
    regulator on alternators where field supply current
    and bus voltage sense share the same pathway.
 
    But aside from this demonstrable effect, I'm aware
    of no other case where increased path resistance
    due to real or imagined join degradation will cause
    breakers or fuses to nuisance trip.
 
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  I'm a beginner on things like this, but I've studied Bob's book and this 
 newsgroup since beginning my homebuilt project five years ago, and cannot 
 understand how the author could be right.  However, I've learned from this 
 list that some components try to consume constant power and that reducing 
 the voltage to them increases the current in order to keep the power 
 constant.  But I think a tungsten filament landing light is a simple 
 resistor (although very temperature sensitive).  I think if I put a 
 resistor in series with a landing light, the amps would go down, not up, 
 and the amount of light produced would decrease.
 
 | 	  
    Correct. The resistance of the lamp will decrease as
    it gets dimmer . . . but not in inverse proportion
    to decrease in voltage . . . i.e. current draw
    STILL goes down, total power consumed still goes
    down, just not like it would if a simple resistive
    load were involved.
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  So what's the truth?  And why?
 
 | 	  
    You were pretty close to it when your skepticism
    based on what you understood raised some flags  . . .
    and you asked questions. With respect to the original
    article: if one assumes the author of the original
    article was not lying, then SOMETHING he did caused
    the problem to go away. He may have moved some
    wiring that cleared an intermittent short . . . but
    believed that cleaning the connections was what
    really did it. We'll never know since the "crime scene"
    was not properly processed and is now probably compromised
    to a degree that true root cause is no longer discoverable.
    But a goodly portion of 135,000 EAA members will join him
    in his erroneous beliefs.
 
    Bob . . .
 
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		rv-9a-online(at)telus.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Aug 17, 2008 6:04 pm    Post subject: Landing Light Pops Breaker | 
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				Bob, and others.
 There are a class of devices that can cause increased current with increased
 resistance in the power circuit.
 Some devices use switching power supplies which are constant-power devices.
 What this means is that if input voltage increases, the current drain
 decreases and vice versa.  This negative resistance effect can cause
 instability, and designers need to take it into consideration.
 
 The best example I have is that my strobe power circuit had a faultly
 (resistive) switch which caused current in the circuit to increase, and
 tripped the breaker.  The strobe supply was attempting to make up for the
 voltage drop in the switch by increasing it's drain current.  The fix was to
 replace the switch and the burned terminals.  I had two switches fail in
 similar manners in different within the first year of operation of my RV-9A.
 One was returned to the vendor for failure analysis, but I never heard back.
 
 I first experienced this type of problem when designing switch mode power
 supplies for cyclotron equipment. Everything worked fine until battery
 internal resistances increased, then voltage/current oscillations would
 start.  Cheap fix was to put a fixed load on the input of the power supply
 and waste a lot of energy to stabilize the load.  Not recommended for
 aircraft!
 
 Vern Little
 
 --
 
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		nuckolls.bob(at)cox.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Aug 17, 2008 6:42 pm    Post subject: Landing Light Pops Breaker | 
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				At 07:02 PM 8/17/2008 -0700, you wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  
 <rv-9a-online(at)telus.net>
 
 Bob, and others.
 There are a class of devices that can cause increased current with increased
 resistance in the power circuit.
 Some devices use switching power supplies which are constant-power devices.
 What this means is that if input voltage increases, the current drain
 decreases and vice versa.  This negative resistance effect can cause
 instability, and designers need to take it into consideration.
 
 | 	  
    Sure . . . but let's put this into perspective. These are
    not unlike the oscillating voltage regulators we discussed
    earlier. But let's consider a system designed to run on 14v
    at 3A (42w input) and protected with a 5A breaker. If series
    resistance of a switch or other joint dropped say 2 volts,
    then the system would compensate and current would rise
    to 42/12 = 3.5A
 
    From the outside looking in, things would appear normal
    but the high resistance location would now be dissipating
    2 x 3.5 = 7 watts! This is probably 4 or 5 times more than
    the power it took to slowly toast the switch in the failure
    analysis I cited. The situation would not last long . . . and
    still wouldn't pop the breaker.
 
    Suppose we have a 28v 42w system that runs 1.5A. Hmmm . . .
    I suppose we could protect that line with a 2A breaker
    but those things are expensive . . . the 22AWG feeder
    is still happy at 5A breaker. But yeah, let's say a
    3A breaker. Now some high resistance condition that would
    push the 3A breaker has to drop 14v at 3A or 42 watts
    of dissipation! It's toasted in a hurry . . .
 
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  The best example I have is that my strobe power circuit had a faultly
 (resistive) switch which caused current in the circuit to increase, and
 tripped the breaker.  The strobe supply was attempting to make up for the
 voltage drop in the switch by increasing it's drain current.  The fix was to
 replace the switch and the burned terminals.  I had two switches fail in
 similar manners in different within the first year of operation of my RV-9A.
 One was returned to the vendor for failure analysis, but I never heard back.
 
 | 	  
    I recall that you sent an S700-2-10 switch back to B&C
    for loose terminals. In that case, voltage excursions caused
    by the loose terminals were probably upsetting the regulation
    stability so badly as to cause a true ov condition that tripped
    the system and opened the breaker. Breaker popping was a
    secondary effect and not caused directly by an increased load
    by a constant power device.
 
    Were you the one that sent me the strobe switch cited
    in the failure analysis I posted?
 
 http://www.aeroelectric.com/articles/Anatomy_of_a_Switch_Failure/Anatomy_of_a_Switch_Failure.html
 
    Again, breaker popping was a secondary effect
    of the overheating of the switch that deformed the contact
    support teeter-totter. These switches are normally good
    for 10A or more in the closed state . . . but this switch
    obviously failed at the pivot bridge as indicated by
    heating patterns . . . this was happening with no more
    than 1/2 volt of drop internal to the switch. So if your
    strobe needed 5A average at 14v it would need only 5.2
    amps at the "reduced" voltage. Yet the 5A at 1/2 volt
    was 2.5 watts of heating on the switch's innards. Not
    enough to 'smoke' it but enough to heat the components
    to eventual failure but it took a number of hours but didn't
    cause smoke in the cockpit.
  	  | Quote: | 	 		  I first experienced this type of problem when designing switch mode power
 supplies for cyclotron equipment. Everything worked fine until battery
 internal resistances increased, then voltage/current oscillations would
 start.  Cheap fix was to put a fixed load on the input of the power supply
 and waste a lot of energy to stabilize the load.  Not recommended for
 aircraft!
 
 | 	  
    That was a true negative resistance problem but those
    generally happen under conditions that are far below those
    needed to trip breakers that have any headroom at all.
 
    Your perception of the behavior of constant-power systems
    is accurate but increased resistance situations sufficient
    to put a switch at risk are too small to be a likely
    cause of breaker popping.
 
    Bob  . . .
 
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