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servo filter capacitor

 
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user9253



Joined: 28 Mar 2008
Posts: 1935
Location: Riley TWP Michigan

PostPosted: Wed Aug 04, 2010 6:09 am    Post subject: servo filter capacitor Reply with quote

The plans call for a 2200µfd capacitor to be connected to the positive power wire at the autopilot servo. The servo is not electrically connected to the aircraft frame at the servo. Instead it has a black negative power wire going back to the instrument panel. Should the negative capacitor lead be connected to aircraft ground at the servo or should it be connected to the black wire? Or does not it matter?
Thanks, Joe


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PostPosted: Wed Aug 04, 2010 6:41 pm    Post subject: servo filter capacitor Reply with quote

At 09:09 AM 8/4/2010, you wrote:
Quote:


The plans call for a 2200µfd capacitor to be
connected to the positive power wire at the
autopilot servo. The servo is not electrically
connected to the aircraft frame at the
servo. Instead it has a black negative power
wire going back to the instrument panel. Should
the negative capacitor lead be connected to
aircraft ground at the servo or should it be
connected to the black wire? Or does not it matter?

It may not matter. I'm skeptical of
any such device hung on the outside of
a product. I had to do it once . . .
a cabin vent blower speed controller
that generated so much noise that
we had to bolt a fat electrolytic
capacitor to the outside of the housing
(UGH!). That's a goof that follows me
around and chews on my buns every time
I work in forward avionics bay of the
King Air.

Does anyone put down a reason in writing
why this capacitor is necessary? Noise
from the actuator? System noises getting
into the actuator that upset its operation?

Understanding the antagonist/victim/coupling
combination that is presumably broken by
adding this capacitor is key to wiring
it for greatest effectiveness.

Who's autopilot are you talking about?
Bob . . .


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user9253



Joined: 28 Mar 2008
Posts: 1935
Location: Riley TWP Michigan

PostPosted: Wed Aug 04, 2010 8:05 pm    Post subject: Re: servo filter capacitor Reply with quote

Quote:
Does anyone put down a reason in writing why this capacitor is necessary? Noise from the actuator? System noises getting into the actuator that upset its operation?


No, there is no explanation. The capacitor came with the kit and is called a "filter" and is to be installed at the servo.

Quote:
Who's autopilot are you talking about?


It is a Dynon servo connected to the FlightDEK-D180 and AP74.

Thanks for the reply,
Joe


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PostPosted: Wed Aug 04, 2010 8:48 pm    Post subject: servo filter capacitor Reply with quote

At 11:05 PM 8/4/2010, you wrote:
Quote:

> Does anyone put down a reason in writing why this capacitor is
necessary? Noise from the actuator? System noises getting into the
actuator that upset its operation?
No, there is no explanation. The capacitor came with the kit and is
called a "filter" and is to be installed at the servo.

Hmmmm . . . I would hope that their instructions
are specific as to where it grounds. Are these Dynon
FlightDEK or third party instructions? I think I
know a guy at Dynon I can ask about it.
Bob . . .


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user9253



Joined: 28 Mar 2008
Posts: 1935
Location: Riley TWP Michigan

PostPosted: Thu Aug 05, 2010 6:36 am    Post subject: Re: servo filter capacitor Reply with quote

Quote:
Hmmmm . . . I would hope that their instructions are specific as to where it grounds. Are these Dynon FlightDEK or third party instructions? I think I know a guy at Dynon I can ask about it.


Third party. The 2200µfd capacitor came with the RV-12 autopilot kit. And yes, the RV-12 directions say to ground the negative lead to the airframe. I questioned that because any noise generated by the servo motor will have a longer path through the airframe. I assume, but do not know, that the servo motor is the antagonist. Actually there are two servo motors (pitch and roll) connected in parallel, but there is only one capacitor. It is connected to the pitch servo which is the one closest to the instrument panel.

It is possible that the intent of the 2,200µfd capacitor is to help smooth the voltage from the single phase Rotax dynamo. But there is already a 22,000µfd capacitor connected to the input power to the instrument panel.
Joe


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PostPosted: Thu Aug 05, 2010 9:00 am    Post subject: servo filter capacitor Reply with quote

At 09:36 AM 8/5/2010, you wrote:
Quote:

> Hmmmm . . . I would hope that their
instructions are specific as to where it
grounds. Are these Dynon FlightDEK or third
party instructions? I think I know a guy at Dynon I can ask about it.
Third party. The 2200µfd capacitor came with
the RV-12 autopilot kit. And yes, the RV-12
directions say to ground the negative lead to
the airframe. I questioned that because any
noise generated by the servo motor will have a
longer path through the airframe. I assume, but
do not know, that the servo motor is the
antagonist. Actually there are two servo motors
(pitch and roll) connected in parallel, but
there is only one capacitor. It is connected to
the pitch servo which is the one closest to the instrument panel.

It is possible that the intent of the 2,200µfd
capacitor is to help smooth the voltage from the
single phase Rotax dynamo. But there is already
a 22,000µfd capacitor connected to the input power to the instrument panel.

Yeah, hard to tell. If the servo grounds locally
to airframe, I'd put the capacitor ground there
also. The capacitor across the single phase
rectifier regulators has minimal benefit. See:

http://www.aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Curves/SD-8_Noise_Data.pdf

While there ARE effects for adding the capacitor,
they don't reduce the ripple voltage markedly.
Nor the the battery have any real effect on
ripple voltage. This is what Mil-STD-704 tells
us to EXPECT on a DC power bus . . . the righteous
designer learns to live with it. Adding capacitors
after the fact is probably whistling in the dark.
Bob . . .


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