Over Voltage and Low Voltage – Inications, Cause, and Correction
Asked by: k-west 17655 views Aircraft Systems, Commercial Pilot, Flight Instructor, General Aviation, Instrument Rating, Private Pilot, Student Pilot
Hello,
I am trying to best understand the conditions that cause an Over Voltage and Low Voltage situation, as well what I should do about them when I receive such indications in-flight.
OVER VOLTAGE
Is an over-voltage indication (the over-voltage light, or the voltmeter showing very high) always accompanied by a high rate of charge on the ammeter?
What is likely to cause an over-voltage situation? Is it just simply when the battery is fully charged, but the alternator doesn't stop charging it?
If an over-voltage indication is given, what can I do about it? Am I just troubleshooting the voltage regulator? I know that re-setting the alternator circuit sometimes helps. If re-setting doesn't work, I suppose the alternator should be shut off (with the alt-fld switch, or maybe by pulling the alternator fuse?).
Does the Over Voltage light in most small aircraft actually detect a high voltage? Or is it just simply detecting the absence of the alternator field (ie. the voltage regulator preventing an actual over-voltage situation)? In our club 172s, you can turn off the "Alt-Fld" side of the master to make the Over Voltage light illuminate. But what if the over voltage protection malfunctions and there is actually a high voltage present, will that light indicate that?
LOW VOLTAGE
I'm fairly confident that a low voltage indication is usually accompanied by a discharge showing on the ammeter. Is this true? Are there situations where this is not true?
What is likely to cause a low voltage situation? Is it just when the alternator stops working? As in, when a belt breaks, or the electricity producing or regulating pieces malfunction?
If a low voltage situation occurs, what can I do about it? In the event of an alternator failure (belt maybe?), it just simply means I'm running off of the battery only, which will eventually die depending on load. So reduce load (turn things off) and land as soon as possible.
FURTHER QUESTIONS
Is an ammeter a critical piece of equipment to diagnose these problems? Or can it be done all just simply with a voltmeter?
Thanks for your help!
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