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![]() "Glenn Ashmore" wrote in message ... Ed Price wrote: Well, pardon me for asking you to address my question. In case you didn't remember, since it always seems to slip your attention during your posts, I wanted to know why the suppression is applied to the LOAD side of the alternator diodes. Perhaps you two could stop slapping each others butts long enough to try to answer that question. True, there are none so ignorant as those who refuse to learn. Now that we're even on stupid witticisms, can you try for a technical answer? OK, I am going to try one more time. What I am about to say was verified yesterday afternoon by Randy Johnson, formerly of Cruising Equipment and developer of the Zap-Stop and confirmed by the tech support people at Balmar and Leece-Neville. When an alternator is producing a significant percentage of its capacity to a load, be it a battery, motor or other device and that load is suddenly removed the output voltage of the alternator will rise. While the rectifier diodes can handle higher than normal amperage for short periods they cannot tolerate voltages significantly over their rating for even an instant. Therefore if this voltage rise is not checked there is a very good possibility that the alternator rectifier diodes will be damaged. The physical law of conservation of energy says that the amount of energy output by a device must equal the amount supplied to it. The power output of an alternator is determined by the amount of energy being supplied by the engine. The amount supplied is a function of RPM and torque. The torque is governed by the intensity of the magnetic field. As the engine speed cannot normally be adjusted quickly the regulator is used to control the magnetic field. This control is fast but it is not instantaneous. As the field collapses, a back EMF is inducted in the field coil slowing the process. Therefore there is a lag in reducing the total power being produced. FOR AN INSTANT TOTAL POWER REMAINS THE SAME. Power is volts times amps. As there is no demand for the amps basic math says that the voltage must rise. The current practice for preventing damage to the regulator diodes is to place a sacrificial diode between the alternator output and ground to provide an alternate path for the energy. Both of the alternator manufacturers I talked to strongly recommend the installation of one of these diodes whenever there is a possibility that a heavy load might be suddenly dropped. This diode will not conduct until the voltage exceeds a certain preset limit determined by its construction. It has only one function: To provide a way for the alternator to shed the surplus current so that the voltage will not rise to a damaging level. The rectifier sees only a slight drop in current demand and a slight rise in voltage. It does not know anything about whether it is supplying the original load or the protecting diode. The protecting diode however has to bite the bullet and very often gives its life in the process but it will last long enough to handle the surge for the fraction of a second required to get the power output below a damaging level. That is about as simple as I can get it. If that is not satisfactory, go talk to JAX. He is more on your level. -- Glenn Ashmore Thanks for the more lucid explanation, despite the several gratuitous insults. After reading your new information, I'll even go so far as to retract my quip of a totally bogus explanation of energy within the alternator; I now realize you were being more condescending than obscure. To me, fast is microseconds or nanoseconds, and I guess you just live in a slower world. It further helps to hear that the Zap-stop only conducts a current similar to the original load, and that for only a few hundred milliseconds. That's probably why connecting the protection to the output of the alternator doesn't kill the alternator diodes. But that leads to another issue. You said the protection diode often fails!! Question 1.: Why does the protection diode "often fail" if it's drawing the same load as the alternator diodes? Question 2.: You assert that the protection diode "will last long enough." Is this some kind of smart silicon, in that it knows when it's OK to die? Again, I'm not familiar with your world, but devices that I have seen in which there is a failure under load usually fail under full load, or at least not when most of the load has gone away. Whenever I cook off a diode, it usually dies a lot faster than a couple of hundred milliseconds. I would think that the protection diode would be sized so that it rarely fails. After all, isn't a protection diode failure just another way of describing load shedding? IIRC, you said that diodes that could handle typical alternator currents could be had at Digikey for under a buck. Maybe you should refer Xentrex, too. Ed |
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