Gets grounded at both the mag and the switch. From the Cessna 182 service manual:Yes, that's the whole point of shielding it.
Note that it should only be grounded at one end.
Ah... I was thinking of what I was dealing with most recently, i.e. audio. Different thing.RF shielding is at both ends. AF shielding is at one end.
Looks like a mouse took a bite out of one of the plug wires. What is the purpose of the ground connection with no wire connected ?
Looks like a mouse took a bite out of one of the plug wires. What is the purpose of the ground connection with no wire connected ?
Kzactly!I suspect that’s the item he mentions finding on the oil change that he now has to repair.
Was going to replace mine with Bogert leads. They'red definitely 1963 original. After annual I found the left mag p lead disconnected but grounded. And the opposite on the right side. Got it corrected, but the shape of the wires is driving me nuts. Wasn't able to figure out what length for the pa28 180 I'd need and haven't gone out to measure. Any guesses?Those P-Leads have seen better days, and likely the remainder of the ignition system as well.
Bogart makes a great cost effective P-Lead replacement. https://bogertaviation.com/search?type=product&q=p-leads
So how did unshielded mags, like my old Case mags on my A-65, deal with early or late firing?This EMI shielding prevents the mag from firing too early or too late. Any noise in this line feeds back to the ignition firing circuit.
So how did unshielded mags, like my old Case mags on my A-65, deal with early or late firing?
Like a "modern" aircraft engine?It probably never ran rough or misfired....
P-lead noise isn't going to cause a mag to fire. The current in the primary is huge, several amps, and RF passing through the P-lead isn't going to generate anything like that. In all my training and experience I have never run across any ideas or problems like that. Electronic ignitions might be a different story, but mags are about as far as you can get, electrically, from electronics as is possible.It probably never ran rough or misfired....
Gets grounded at both the mag and the switch. From the Cessna 182 service manual:
RF shielding is at both ends. AF shielding is at one end. Headphone jacks should be insulated from the panel. The headphone ground is taken all the way back to the audio panel ground.
Ground looping through those doesn't cause audio noise.Audio panel manufacturers single point ground shields to prevent ground loops. Shouldn’t P lead and voltage regulator shields be single point grounded too?
Ground looping through those doesn't cause audio noise.
Electronic voltage regulators (ACUs) are notoriously sensitive to stray RF.
Shout-out to Michael Denman, Top quality, from what I can tell.
I would.Dan, what about shielded strobe wires, should they be grounded at both ends?
The old electromechanical regulators had a regulator relay in them that was buzzing constantly, opening and closing to control the field current. The inductance of the field winding leveled off the pulsation somewhat, but enough was left that it cause audio noise. Even some of the hybrid regulators, with a transistorized regulation section, had the on-off stuff, fired by a zener diode. The ACUs that showed up around 1980 use variable field current, not the "digital" on-off that causes noise.Cessna never shielded their ACU or alternator wire after leaving the 4 wire automotive regulators (1980ish).