Katamarino
Pattern Altitude
I've got a weird one for the group. A few weeks ago my A&P and I completed installation of an EDM930 bought new from JPI. Initial power-up was normal - but after a few power cycles and leaving it on for longer, all temperatures start dropping from ambient rapidly and in unison. EGTs, CHTs, OAT, Oil T, Carb T. See the video.
JPI said that the temperature control circuit must have malfunctioned and shipped a new unit, which we installed. It worked completely normally for about 4 flying hours. Then, it started behaving like the old one did.
In flight, it is as if the unit is applying an ~360 degree negative offset to all temps. CHT and EGT read about 360 lower than normal, but with the same relative offsets between cylinders. OAT/Oil-T/Carb-T all go so low that the unit Xes them out, and EGT/CHT X out on the ground when the engine is off. Occasionally in flight the temps will all revert quickly to normal for a minute or less, and then drop again. See video 1, of this behaviour:
Once home, my A&P and I replaced the ground connection to a different part of the engine case. We confirmed good continuity of ground all the way from the pin on the connector at the unit, to the terminal on the engine, and then through to the engine itself (e.g. cylinder barrel). There was less than 0.5 ohm resistance across any of these points.
We then unplugged the EGT/CHT connector from the unit; the same behaviour continued on the other temps when powered back on.
We ran the unit with every other circuit breaker on the aircraft pulled; the behaviour was unchanged. See video:
We disconnected the OAT, Carb and Oil-T probes one at a time and powered on the unit. Temps were still displaying "off the scale" low. Visual inspection of all wiring in the harness that we could see revealed nothing abnormal.
We checked voltage differences between instrument case and panel ground, airframe ground, and engine ground when powered on. All were 0V.
Some further *really* odd behaviour; if the unit has been turned off for a while, then at power-on the temps read normal. After some time, they start to drop in synchrony. The longer that the unit has been turned off, roughly the longer it takes before the temps start to drop after power-on.
It almost feels like some kind of capacitance is building up a voltage offset that affects the temp unit, slowly dissipating when you turn the unit off. I have no idea if that's even possible or how it would occur, though.
JPI don't know what's going on, but are working on it. The first unit arrived back to them today and I'll be interested to see the bench test results. The avionics installer who sold me the unit is very experienced and has never seen anything like it. Does anyone have any idea what could be causing this? It seems unique.
JPI said that the temperature control circuit must have malfunctioned and shipped a new unit, which we installed. It worked completely normally for about 4 flying hours. Then, it started behaving like the old one did.
In flight, it is as if the unit is applying an ~360 degree negative offset to all temps. CHT and EGT read about 360 lower than normal, but with the same relative offsets between cylinders. OAT/Oil-T/Carb-T all go so low that the unit Xes them out, and EGT/CHT X out on the ground when the engine is off. Occasionally in flight the temps will all revert quickly to normal for a minute or less, and then drop again. See video 1, of this behaviour:
Once home, my A&P and I replaced the ground connection to a different part of the engine case. We confirmed good continuity of ground all the way from the pin on the connector at the unit, to the terminal on the engine, and then through to the engine itself (e.g. cylinder barrel). There was less than 0.5 ohm resistance across any of these points.
We then unplugged the EGT/CHT connector from the unit; the same behaviour continued on the other temps when powered back on.
We ran the unit with every other circuit breaker on the aircraft pulled; the behaviour was unchanged. See video:
We disconnected the OAT, Carb and Oil-T probes one at a time and powered on the unit. Temps were still displaying "off the scale" low. Visual inspection of all wiring in the harness that we could see revealed nothing abnormal.
We checked voltage differences between instrument case and panel ground, airframe ground, and engine ground when powered on. All were 0V.
Some further *really* odd behaviour; if the unit has been turned off for a while, then at power-on the temps read normal. After some time, they start to drop in synchrony. The longer that the unit has been turned off, roughly the longer it takes before the temps start to drop after power-on.
It almost feels like some kind of capacitance is building up a voltage offset that affects the temp unit, slowly dissipating when you turn the unit off. I have no idea if that's even possible or how it would occur, though.
JPI don't know what's going on, but are working on it. The first unit arrived back to them today and I'll be interested to see the bench test results. The avionics installer who sold me the unit is very experienced and has never seen anything like it. Does anyone have any idea what could be causing this? It seems unique.