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OK, so the Zap-stop is wired across the output of the alternator, and it's
just a zener diode. Now, how can a diode be damaged? One way is to exceed its reverse voltage capability. Another way is to exceed its current capacity. Put the Zap-stop as described, and apply the transient from the vehicle side. Either a high-voltage positive or negative transient will result in strong conduction through the zener. As long as the zener can sink it, the voltage will be limited by the strong conduction. But now, posit that the overvoltage transient is starting in the alternator windings. The zap-stop, on the output side of the bridge, may go into strong conduction. But that current will also have to flow through the bridge diodes. So how does causing a massive current through the alternator diodes provide protection? Ed "Glenn Ashmore" wrote in message ... I believe we may be looking at it wrong. Go back to the original problem. When the high amperage going to the battery is interupted, the voltage starts to rise. What the Zap Stop does is provide an alternate path for the current so that the flow is not interupted. Yes, the coils are still outputting through the rectifier but if we can detect the start of this rise fast enough and redirect the rectifier output to ground, the current flow never stops so the voltage never gets high enough to damage the rectifier. BTW, in the other thread you were asking about a schematic. Here it is: + --------|------ - It is just a zenier diode (or maybe several in parallel) in a nice box wired against the normal current flow. When the voltage rises above the breakdown rating of the diode, it conducts. As usual with most "marine" devices, it is 5% material and 95% marketing but it does the job. Ed Price wrote: If the Zap-stop is connected to the alternator output, then it is positioned best to protect the alternator against transients originating in the rest of the vehicle's electrical system. (The worst source might be a high-current motor, like the AC blower fan.) OTOH, earlier posts have said that the sudden removal of load causes a high voltage transient in the alternator's windings. This means that the Zap-stop protects the alternator diodes from a high voltage by requiring the diodes to pass a massive current transient into the Zap-stop and to ground. That's strange protection! If you wanted to protect against an alternator winding over-voltage, wouldn't you have to put the protection at the winding side of the alternator diodes? The last time I looked inside an alternator, it had three field windings connected to a 6-diode full-wave bridge rectifier. Protecting the bridge against voltage transients would require one Zap-stop type device across each winding. An over-voltage event would then conduct through the Zap-stop devices, and not through the alternator diodes. Could all of this discussion have been based on a misconception of what happens when a heavy load current (into an inductive load like a motor winding). The potentially damaging transient is caused by the counter emf from the load, and not from any "slow regulator" effect within the alternator. If the Zap-stop is mounted to the alternator output lug, then that's apparently what the Zap-stop is configured to protect against. Ed -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
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