Winter Ops - Pre Heat

Topics related to keeping your plane Airworthy and Resources such as manuals and Pilot Operating Handbooks
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Scudrunner
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I need to sell some more T-Shirts to get this hangar


5 out of 2 Pilots are Dyslexic.
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Colonel
Posts: 2567
Joined: Wed Jan 15, 2020 10:02 pm
Location: Over The Runway

Seriously, last time I started an L39, the battery was dead. Go figure.

External power plug didn't work. Not sure if it was the plug on the
cart or the connector in the airplane.

Popped the cowl and used a pair of jumper cables from the battery
cart to the 24V battery in the nose. Hot comes from the "top" 12V
truck battery in series, cold comes from the ground of the bottom
12V truck battery, so there's your 24V.

Worked perfectly.

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Everyone does that, right?
45 / 47 => 95 3/4%
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Colonel
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Joined: Wed Jan 15, 2020 10:02 pm
Location: Over The Runway

Pop Quiz: there is a HUGE disadvantage, to jumpering a dead battery
as opposed to using the external battery power connector on the side
of the airplane.

This is counter-intuitive, because of the long cables involved with the
external connector. But the external connector enables something which
makes starting with a dead battery MUCH easier.

What is it?
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anofly
Posts: 161
Joined: Fri Dec 30, 2016 6:26 pm

By passes the dead battery? so you dont use up power trying to charge it , along with starting>?
John Swallow
Posts: 167
Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2020 4:21 am

Ran into a similar problem years ago trying to cold start a JetRanger that had sat overnight at a company lumber mill in NB in the middle of the winter. Turns out the some of the woodlands equipment were 24 volt: long jumper cables and one of the machines and we were on our way...
JW Scud
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Joined: Thu Jan 30, 2020 2:25 pm

Oops, wrong answer.
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Colonel
Posts: 2567
Joined: Wed Jan 15, 2020 10:02 pm
Location: Over The Runway

By passes the dead battery? so you dont use up power trying to charge it , along with starting>?
Exactly! When you jumper a dead battery, it's low voltage sucks amps
away from the starter. If you check the POH for any reasonably sophisticated
external power aircraft system, using a relay it should disconnect the battery
for start. There should be a procedure, after the engine(s) are running and
the alternator(s) are charging, to disconnect the external power and get the
alternators charging the weak internal battery.

Remember alternators need a little voltage - and not much in the way of
amps - to excite the field and produce current. This is not the case with an
antique generator.

So, if you hand bomb a dead battery, you may see that the alternator isn't
producing any amps, which is annoying. If your alternator dies, and you
discharge the battery, and replace the alternator, for this reason you may
not see any charge, and incorrectly conclude that the new alternator is bad.

No. You need to re-charge or replace the battery, when you replace the
alternator.

I remember back in the 1980's jump-starting my Camaro - dead battery -
and I drove non-stop to Kingston. Stopped for gas. When I tried to crank
it, the battery was dead as a doornail, which kind of surprised me. I was
young. They told me it was art. I needed the money.

See, the alternator was providing itself with enough volts to power the
electrical system - and futilely try to re-charge the dead battery - from the
jump start.

Today's Fun Fact: Automotive alternators these days generally include
the regulator internally, so they are "one wire". Not so of piston aircraft,
which use an alternator, an external voltage regulator, and even another
box, an external over-voltage protector. Personally, I like to combine the
regulator and over-voltage protection into a nice little solid-state box with
3 wires. Pro tip: they don't like heat. Mount them aft of the firewall.
45 / 47 => 95 3/4%
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