bflynn
Final Approach
And once solved it will become a trivial and boring problem.This is a fascinating and frustrating problem.
And once solved it will become a trivial and boring problem.This is a fascinating and frustrating problem.
Let's hope.And once solved it will become a trivial and boring problem.
Did you or your mechanic have to do any harness building/pinning that could have gotten reversed? The JPI manual does a good job of not referencing positive or negative for the thermocouples but the red wire on traditional thermocouple wiring is the negative one and in some measurement systems when the positive and negative are reversed the indicated temperatures will go down instead of up.
I believe we did; the ground strap is properly installed and we have confirmed good ground continuity between engine and airframe with less than 0.5 ohm resistance between any points.I don't want to reread the thread, but did you ever make sure the engine is properly grounded?
Might want to undo the strap and brighten up the contact surfaces on both ends. Can't hurt.I believe we did; the ground strap is properly installed and we have confirmed good ground continuity between engine and airframe with less than 0.5 ohm resistance between any points.
@Katamarino Any news?
It makes me think of our old tube type TVs.Intermittency makes me think of loose things vibrating.
You skipped pulling tubes and going down to the drug store to use the tube testerIt makes me think of our old tube type TVs.
Give it a good smack and see what happens.
I had my own tube tester. I often fixed friends and neighbors TVs. First diagnostic was a slap. If that helped I assumed a tube was flaky and brought out the tube tester.You skipped pulling tubes and going down to the drug store to use the tube tester
You skipped pulling tubes and going down to the drug store to use the tube tester
And fiddling with the rabbit ears antenna. Aluminum foil sometimes helped, for mysterious reasons.
Yes...it keeps the NSA from altering mind waves......... Aluminum foil sometimes helped, for mysterious reasons.
This is a fascinating and frustrating problem.
Reading through this makes it almost certain to be a grounding issue.
1) The system has worked as expected, so no wire polarities are reversed.
2) The broken times affects ALL probes at the same time and to the same degree. Only thing they should all have in common is the ground wire.
This is going to be an interrupted ground issue. It could be that the ground path is fine but that something is vibrating to be in contact with the ground path messing it up. So when you look at the ground wires and connectors they are fine, but it is really something nearby causing the issue.
As previously stated:
as for point 2-
All the signals could be biased by whatever method they're using to handle the cold junction compensation.
This to me is far more probable than a grounding issue. The TCs don't need to be grounded to generate their very tiny levels of emf. The amplifier or AD converters will need power, but they're not measuring a signal that is even referenced to ground
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.
JPI analysed the first defective unit, and found what they described as a "suspect" component.