Hi All,
Well, it's been a few weeks since I added the earth strap to my engine oil cooler and flown a few hours. Firstly, I am going to recap on a few things, if you would like to bounce over this recap go down to,
Start Here.
I have a Jabiru 430/230 Gen 4 aircraft, it has dual Voyager EFIS's, one for the pilot and one for the co-pilot both sharing one RDAC. I had flown this plane for about 30 hours before I started having GPS dropouts.
The GPS dropouts started slowly and increased over the next 10 hours of flying. It was about 1 dropout per hour, then 1 or 2 dropouts per flight and then 2 to 3 dropouts per hour and then normally the GPS would be back in service in a matter of seconds. Then one day the GPS took minutes to get back on-line, so I started swapping things around between the two EFIS's, like the GPS antennas, power supply cables, SP units and installed 2 new GPS Antennas.
Those changes made very little difference to the number of GPS dropouts, so I swapped over the two Voyager EFIS's between the pilot and co-pilot sides, thinking I would then have a working GPS on the pilot side of the aircraft. To my surprise the GPS dropouts remained with the EFIS on the pilot side.
I then checked for any loose electrical connections and found nothing. But from doing this, I realized I had changed the order of the connected devices to the negative bus bar on the instrument panel, at around the time the GPS dropouts started happening. So I changed the negative bus bar order of connections back to what they had been, or as close as possible. In doing this, I found the EFIS GPS dropouts had moved from the Pilot EFIS to the Co-Pilot EFIS and with this there had been a huge reduction in the GPS dropouts nearly to nothing whilst flying.
This led me to think the problem was now EMI or static discharge as Rainer had talked about. So the next step was to check the plane's earthing system using a multimeter to see if there was anything electrically isolated that could be causing a static discharge. I found the engine oil cooler was electrically isolated from the earth system as it had no earth strap to it. So I made an earth strap and attached it between the engine oil cooler and the engine block.
Start Here.
After earthing the oil cooler and a few hours of flying, I think the earth strap from the oil cooler to the engine block has lessened the EFIS GPS dropouts in flight, but I must still have a small issue somewhere causing the odd GPS dropout.
Putting an earth strap on your radiator or oil cooler is not hard and costs very little and then you have one less thing to worry about that could cause issues. If you own an older plane and put an EFIS in it, I would take off all the earth straps and clean them up to make sure they don't have any electrical resistance.
Here is an interesting example where you think there should be a good electrical connection between two parts. But this pic below shows a rivet that has a very poor electrical contact between the rivet and firewall, the cause could be a small amount of oxidization or corrosion between the contact surfaces and this can happen for earthling strap connectors as well.
Cheers
JimJab
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