Hi Charlie "How did I protect the wires going to the circuit breakers?” I’m not sure I understand your question (sorry if I’m being slow)
I have a 10 guage feed from battery through key switch to the engine critical blade fuse buss which is built into the Bussmann fuse block (see photo).
I have seperate fuses for Pri and Sec Injectors. From these two fuses electrons go to separate Pri & Sec 4 pole switches (one pole used to activate cold start, the other three poles parraleled to meet current requirements of two injectors, these are mounted with the coil test switch) [I may remove these switched in the future as my own weighing of risk is currently on the side of the switches presenting higher risk and complexity than chances of actual injector failure] From these switches current flows to the Pri & Sec injector pairs. Then the individual injectors feed back to the EC2 FETS which then return to one of my earth busses.
I used the Bussmann fuse block as it enabled high density power distribution while enabling me to access each circuit easily for testing. This fuse block sits at the bottom centre of my panel in front of a console mounted throttle quadrant making it easily accessible and central for distribution throughout aircraft.
Cheers Steve Izett On 18 Jul 2014, at 4:24 am, Charlie England <flyrotary@lancaironline.net> wrote:
Thanks, Steve.
Guess I should have known even more options would turn up. :-)
I like the idea, but how did you protect the wires going *to* the switch-breakers? Are they just on a high current bus with the rest of your breakers? If so, it might not work for me, since I'm using automotive fuse panels. Right now, I've planned for multi-pole injector switches wired as shown in the manual (but with a separate pole for each injector), mounted next to Tracy's engine control panel (the coil test switch is there, too).
Charlie
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