• Voltage Regulation, Remote Voltage Sensed ∗ Increased Regulator life. Reduced panel lights flicker
1
• Low – Over Voltage Warning Light Output
Voltage Regulation: 14.2V + 0.2V. Max Field Current: 5A.
The R15100 alternator controller works with 12V alternators on many aircraft models. It requires an external
Over-voltage (OV) sensor for OV protection.
VOLTAGE REGULATION.
The Voltage Regulator, with Remote Voltage sense of
the Alternator output, keeps the bus voltage constant by
controlling the alternator’s field current: increasing it
when the system load increases and decreasing it when
the load drops.
OVER VOLTAGE (OV) PROTECTION. Not Built-in
The external OV Sensor provides OV protection by
turning off the OV relay inside the controller if the bus
voltage exceeds 16V. With the relay off, the Controller
and the alternator turn off to protect sensitive avionics
equipment and the battery.
LOW & OVER VOLTAGE WARNING.
A warning light connected between pin I and the bus
comes on to warn the pilot if the buss voltage exceeds
the OV level or the alternator is off-line because there is
no voltage on pin S.
Closing the Bat switch applies the battery voltage to
pin A of the alternator controller (ACU, regulator).
With voltage at pin A (Alt switch off), the LV light
comes on, indicating that the alternator is off-line.
Closing the Alt switch applies battery voltage to pin S
through the Over Voltage Sensor (OVS). The OVS’
output controls a relay inside the alternator controller.
With power applied to pin S, that relay’s normally
open (NO) contacts connects pin A and pin I.
With power on pin S, current flows from the alternator’s Bat terminal through the controller’s voltage
regulator to the alternator’s field. The regulator keeps
the bus voltage constant (around 14V) by controlling
the alternator's field current. It increases the field
current with increase in system load and decreases it,
with a decrease in the system load.
Since the whole field current (max about 3.5 Amps)
flows from the alternator’s Bat terminal to pin A of
the controller, abnormal increases in wire, connection,
or junction resistances will cause poor voltage regulation and or fluctuating charge meter, panel lights, and
bus voltage.
If the field of the alternator shorts to ground, the controller will be damaged. To get field-to-ground short protection update to the R15100 Rev A.
If the bus voltage exceeds about 16V, the Over Voltage Sensor (OVS) will open and thus remove power
from pin S. Removing power from pin S will turn off
the controller and take the alternator off line.
LV-OV Light
The LV-OV light on the instrument panel indicates
the condition of the charging system. See the troubleshooting section for how this function operates.
Alt Fld BUS BAR Alt Out
Alt
Red
OVS
Orange
2A
Bat
Bat Relay
- BAT +
LV-OV Light
ACU
I
Relay
VR
S
A
F
60A
or X
A
B
F
ALT
INSTALLATION INSTRUCTION
1. Disconnect and remove the present ACU/VR.
2. Measure the Alternator’s Field Resistance between
the field wire of airframe’s VR connector and
Ground. 3.5 to 6Ω is normal resistance. If is less than
3Ω or greater than 8Ω, check the alternator field or
the field wire for problems. 0Ω means Fld-Gnd short.
3. Check the ALT switch resistance: 0.1Ω is normal.
4. Mount and connect the new ACU to the system.
5. Perform the Post Installation Test Procedure.
POST INSTALLATION TEST PROCEDURE
1. With the engine off, turn on the Alt & Bat switches,
on the instrument panel, observe that the LV-OV
light is off. Verify that the voltage drop across the
alternator switch and 5 Amp circuit breaker is less
than 0.2V.
2. Verify that the voltage drop from the alternator BAT
terminal to pin A is less than 0.2V.
4. If the steps 1 to 3 are successful, perform steps 5 & 6.
5. Turn off all the avionics and any other voltage sensitive devices.
6. Start the engine, and at 1500 RPM measure a bus
voltage of 13.9-14.4V. If the bus voltage exceed
these limits, check for voltage drops from the
alternator BAT terminal to pin A and wires/
connection from the ACU (F) to the alternator’s field.
TROUBLE-SHOOTINGTHE SYSTEM
For help on how to solve problems in the system, see the
Trouble-Shooting Notes (TSN) page and or TechCards.
I
NSTRUCTIONSFOR
C
ONTINUED AIRWORTHINESS MAINTENANCE
This device is not field repairable or serviceable. For all
service, repair or overhaul needs, return it to Z
ICS
or a ZEFTRONICS approved repair station.
EFTRON-
For all periodic inspection and test requirement, use the
pre and post installation procedure listed above.
Contact us with tech support questions that are not addressed at Zeftronics.com or in the TSN or TechCards.
The voltage pin F should be 0.5-2V less than the
bus’. If the pin I voltage is less than bus voltage,
look for bad LV-OV light, broken wire from LVOV light, grounded pin I or damaged controller.
If the pin A voltage is less than bus’, look for
corrosion on the BAT terminal, socket for pin A
on the airframe ACU connector, or wire (from
ALT Bat to pin A) with high resistance. This may
cause fluctuating charge meter or bus voltage,
and may cause over-voltage and nuisance tripping
(i.e. alternator dropping off-line).
If the pin S voltage is less than bus’, look for a
grounded pin S or damaged controller. Pin S to
ground on the controller is about 400Ω.
If the pin F voltage is the same as the bus voltage,
look for a damaged or un-grounded controller. If
it is 0V, look for a grounded ALT field.
2. If the Master switch is a split type, turn off the
Alt Sw and measure the indicated voltages.
The voltages on pins I, S & F should be 0-2V, pin A
should be battery or bus voltage.
If pin I has bus voltage on it, look for a short between
pins A & I (internal or external to the controller).
Disconnect the controller, a resistance of 0-1K
between pins A & I indicates a damaged controller.
Check the alternator Field & Power input wire
3. Disconnect/Remove the connector on the ACU.
Measure the resistance at the identified points.
Pin F to Gnd ______Ω. FLD to Gnd ______Ω
Pin A to ALT Bat _______Ω
The normal Alt field resistance is 3-6Ω.
A lower or higher resistance may indicate problems
with the alternator. Field resistance below 3Ω may
indicate a short to ground, while higher than 6Ω
dirty brushes or intermittently open field.
BETTER TROUBLE-SHOOTING TECHNIQUE
The most common trouble-shooting technique
involves replacing suspected defective parts until
problem goes away. That shot-gun method is a very
expensive and often unsuccessful. Using a more
systematic approach to trouble-shooting alerts the
user or mechanic to the conditions of the field circuit
breaker, alternator switch, alternator controller, and
alternator's field. This approach to trouble-shooting
looks at the condition of the pre-controller,
controller, and post-controller components.
PRE-CONTROLLER CONDITION: Check the
condition of the alternator switch, the field circuit
breaker, or the wiring from the Alt Bat to pin A on
the controller is open.
VOLTAGE REGULATOR CONDITION: Are the
voltages on pins I, A, S and F according to the
installation test data on page 4? If not, use the
information on these 4 pages to solve the problem.
ALTERNATOR FIELD CONDITION: Are the
field resistances measured from the airframe ACU
connector and at the alternator according to the
installation test data on page 4? If not, use the
information on these 4 pages to solve the problem
Most electrical charging system problems are easily
solved by applying the systematic trouble-shooting
approach with a good understanding of Ohm’s law
and basic electricity.
Alt Fld BUS BAR Alt Out
60A
or X
A
B
F
ALT
Alt
Red
OVS
Orange
2A
Bat
Bat Relay
- BAT +
LV-OV Light
ACU
I
Relay
VR
S
A
F
In this Type B system: the controller is between the
Bus and the Alt field. To control the bus voltage, the
unit switches power to one side of the field several
times a second. The OVP opens when OV occurs.
14V Type B alternator system on Beech, Cessna, Grumman, Maule, etc
ROUBLE-SHOOTINGTHESYSTEM
T
Flickering / oscillating ammeter and panel lights.
Check the connections between the Alternator Bat terminal and the pin A input to the controller for high resistance, corrosion, dirt, loose or intermittent connection..
No voltage regulation
With the engine off and the Master switch on. Pins I, A,
and S should measure Battery voltage, pin F should be
0.5 to 2V less the bus voltage.
• If the measured voltage is different, see The volt-
ages on pins I, A, S should equal bus’ on page 3
for probable causes for the problem.
• If the pin F voltage is the same as the bus voltage,
look for and correct open circuit or high resistance
in the alternator’s field or the wire between the
field and pin F. The controller might not be properly grounded.
• If the pin F voltage is 0V and pins I, A, S have
battery voltage, look for a grounded alternator
field or field wire. If the field resistance is correct
as shown in step 5 of the installation tests, send the
ACU in for test/repair. If there is a field ground
fault, repair it or replace the defective alternator.
• If the pin F voltage is correct, verify that the field
resistance and the condition of the connections and
wires between the ACU and the field are good.
Bus voltage remains at battery voltage (about 12V)
To solve this problem, see No voltage regulation.
Alternator carries only about half its rated output.
Look for an open stator wire or open diode in the
alternator. Check the shunts and alternator output wires
indicating an alternator that is current limiting.
Bus voltage drops with load increase
To solve this problem, see Alternator carries only about
half its rated output and or the condition of the wire/
connections between pin A and the alternator Bat
terminal
.
LV-OV light does not work, everything else works
Disconnect the ACU. Turn on the Bat switch. Ground
pin I. The light should illuminate. If it does not, the lamp
is defective or the wires to or from it are broken
2. Check for and replace open, frayed, or broken wires. Clean thoroughly or replace corroded, dirty, or oxidized connections, terminals,
contact, or poorly soldered wire junction.
3. Check for Open or Ground-shorted alternator field. Most 12V alternators have 3-6Ω field resistance. Ground shorted alternator field
will damage most Voltage Regulators/ACU. Repair or replace an
alternator has a field to ground short, do not connect the ACU to it.
4. With the engine off: Check voltage drops across the Field, Alt
switch, Alt field circuit breaker and ACU. High voltage-drop means
excessive junction resistance and will lead to many problems like:
fluctuation ammeters, charge-meters and panel lights.
5. Perform and record the following tests with the Master Switch Off:
12V Values Typical Values
A. Field resistance at ALT __________Ω3 – 6Ω
B. Field resistance at ACU __________Ω3 – 6Ω
C. Field SW/C-BKR resistance __________Ω0 – 0.1Ω
D. ALT Bat to Pin A resistance __________Ω0 – 0.05Ω
E. ALT Out C/BKR resistance __________Ω0 – 0.05Ω
6. Perform and record the following tests with the Master Switch On:
Engine Off Bat Switch on Alt Switch on Typical Values
A. Bus Voltage __________V __________V 12 – 13V
D. Pin I Voltage __________V __________V 12 – 13V
E. Pin A Voltage __________V __________V 12 – 13V
F. Pin S Voltage __________V __________V 12 – 13V
F. Field Voltage __________V __________V 0.5-2V <VBus
7. Post Installation. If all tests are correct to or per steps 5 & 6, run
the engine and record: 12V System Typical value
In this Type B system: the controller is between the Bus and the
Alternator’s field. To control the bus voltage, the unit switches power
to the field several times a second. The OVS opens when OV occurs.