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![]() "Vito" wrote in message ... Ed Price wrote: .... So how does causing a massive current through the alternator diodes provide protection? By limiting voltage. Diodes can tolerate massive current for short (milli or microsecond) periods of time without damage from overheating, but excess voltage spikes of the same duration may "zap" the crystal matricies that make them work as diodes. In the long history of alternator existence, Xentrex has been the only one to notice that alternators need a transient suppressor on their output terminal? Another poster contends that the alternator experiences several hundred milliseconds of overvoltage before its regulation can adjust to a load cut-off. A couple of hundred milliseconds dumping a hundred amps or so into the short-circuit that the Zap-stop presents is bad news for alternator diodes. Please address my initial comment; why does Xentrex put the "protection" on the wrong (my assertion) side of the alternator diodes? Ed |
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