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Posted

Went to fly last Thursday and couldn’t get the plane to stop showing a noticeable discharge. Didn’t matter if the avionics were on or off or at higher power settings. I did one lap in the pattern and watched my Jpi show a dip from 11.8V to 11.5V after I put gear up. I decided at that point something wasn’t right and came right back around to land. Fast forward today I installed my new Concorde xc battery, thinking it was the 3yr old Gill battery and to no avail the same issue. Fast forward to me taking the cowling off and looking at the alternator and touching the wires to check if they were loose and it works again after a few starts. I held a razor blade to the face of the alternator and it has magnetism and there’s voltage going to field wire with the master on and engine off. None of the wires looked bad, or were noticeably loose. I moved and touched everyone… they were all tight. I couldn’t find in the logbooks when that alternator was last overhauled or repaired. I plan to fly Saturday and do a few touch and goes to see if the shock from landing moves something loose or whatever could have been causing the issue. My mechanic will look at it Monday but I was honestly ready to send the alternator off for OH. Aero Accessories said it’s 630bucks which isn’t bad but I don’t want to spend it if I don’t have to. Should I still send it off to be OH if my mechanic can’t find anything? I obviously did something to make it work so it has to be at the wires going to the alternator or the plastic pieces that holds the field wires inside the alternator. IMG_1207.png.a0dc681a6025d394f8ec7acbfa17c9af.png

Posted

In both my cases, the connector was loose on the wire or broke off. I’d check those first…

Very common on our Mooneys…

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-Don

Posted
  On 4/4/2025 at 4:15 AM, hammdo said:

In both my cases, the connector was loose on the wire or broke off. I’d check those first…

-Don

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That’s the weird thing nothing was broke off and noticeable loose. I could move one of the wires but it would rotate the whole ring connector with the wire. The nut on it was quite snug. 

Posted

On the back of mine where the white wire is attached on top, that ‘black’ section should be removable (diodes and brushes I think). There is a kit for that to replace. 

May be what needs changing…

-Don

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Posted

Those crimp connectors lead a hard life in a hot, difficult environment.  They don’t last forever.  Connector failure is far more common than alternator failure.

  • Like 3
Posted
  On 4/4/2025 at 4:59 AM, PT20J said:

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I just looked at that chart seems intimidating to me but I’m sure any competent mechanic is capable. The time and money to troubleshoot though could be close to 630 in labor right? 130hr for my mechanic. To get to all these spots and test them, or is it not that long of a job. I searched the logs and found that in 05 the I’m assuming current alternator was installed. That would mean it has roughly 1764hrs on it which mostly has been in the horrid environment that Florida is. IMG_1217.jpeg.5f92a315a2efe41d4f62069f0c63b216.jpeg

Posted

I had that issue on my M20F three months ago.  Found that the 70 amp circuit breaker broken off where the wire connects to it.  

Posted

If it started working when you wiggled the wires, it is probably the brush holder. They are kind of weak where the studs connect to the brush wires. You can fix it if you remove the brush holder and solder the ring terminals (internal) to the studs. Or you can buy a new brush holder. There are about three different brush holders and the brushes don't always fit a different brush holder, so if you buy a new brush holder, you should probably get new brushes too.

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Posted
  On 4/4/2025 at 5:41 AM, Grant_Waite said:

The time and money to troubleshoot though could be close to 630 in labor right?

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The problem with loading up the parts cannon is that the alternator might be okay.  If the new alternator doesn't fix the problem, then you still have to do the troubleshooting.  Besides, your mechanic may have a boat payment coming up. :D

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  • Haha 1
Posted
  On 4/4/2025 at 4:15 AM, hammdo said:

In both my cases, the connector was loose on the wire or broke off. I’d check those first…

Very common on our Mooneys…

IMG_3017.jpeg

IMG_1852 (Medium).JPG

 

-Don

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You seem to be missing your alternator cooling duct. It is part of the alternator conversion to add the cooling duct fitting to the front of the baffling. If you don't use the cooling duct, your alternator will run cooler if you remove the shroud from the back. 

  • Like 1
Posted

The engine was overhauled in 2019 by Zephyr so I’m not sure if the price of the overhaul included an overhaul exchange alternator or not. I called the previous owner and he and I both agree that nothing was changed out when the oh was done. He wasn’t the type to cheap out on things like an alternator. I spoke with 2 shops they said it could be possible that the brushes could be going bad and sometimes they make contact and sometimes they don’t. 
Luckily I have a personal relationship with my mechanic so I don’t have to worry about certain things like most. 

Posted
  On 4/4/2025 at 8:55 PM, Grant_Waite said:

The engine was overhauled in 2019 by Zephyr so I’m not sure if the price of the overhaul included an overhaul exchange alternator or not. I called the previous owner and he and I both agree that nothing was changed out when the oh was done. He wasn’t the type to cheap out on things like an alternator. I spoke with 2 shops they said it could be possible that the brushes could be going bad and sometimes they make contact and sometimes they don’t. 
Luckily I have a personal relationship with my mechanic so I don’t have to worry about certain things like most. 

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I wasn’t saying there is a problem with the brushes. The problem would be with the brush holder. The brush holder connects the field wires with the brushes and supports the brushes. You can easily remove it to inspect it. Just remove the field wires, then remove the two bolts outside of the field wires and pull it out. Inspect the connections on the back side of the field wire studs. If they are loose, you have found your intermittent connection. To replace the brush holder, push the brushes down and stick a wire through the little hole to hold the brushes down, slide it back into the alternator, put the bolts back in and pull the wire out which lets the brushes contact the slip rings. This can all be done easily without removing the alternator. 

  • Like 3
Posted
  On 4/4/2025 at 11:54 PM, N201MKTurbo said:

I wasn’t saying there is a problem with the brushes. The problem would be with the brush holder. The brush holder connects the field wires with the brushes and supports the brushes. You can easily remove it to inspect it. Just remove the field wires, then remove the two bolts outside of the field wires and pull it out. Inspect the connections on the back side of the field wire studs. If they are loose, you have found your intermittent connection. To replace the brush holder, push the brushes down and stick a wire through the little hole to hold the brushes down, slide it back into the alternator, put the bolts back in and pull the wire out which lets the brushes contact the slip rings. This can all be done easily without removing the alternator. 

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Makes sense. A bad field connection (at the alternator terminal, the brushes, or -less likely - at the regulator) will disable the alternator. Easy (inexpensive) to check.

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Posted

I’ve had 4 “alternator failures”. First thing I’ve done is reset the alt field circuit breaker. It will reset the VR, either causing it to come back online (as indicated by voltage) or not. That gives you an idea. 
 

3 of the 4 events was broken connectors on the back of the alternator. One the field wire and twice the field wire jumper. 
 

the fourth event, still broken wires, just way more tricky. I was convinced it was the VR going bad so I bought a Zefftronics VR (which by the way, their install instructions tell you exactly where to read resistance and voltage and what value it should be at each point if you want me to track it down for u). While installing, I had a sneaking suspicion about the canon plug that plugs into the VR. I disassembled the cannon plug on my back from underneath the panel (pain in ass) and voila- smoking gun. The field wire had chafed off insulation and was grounding against the wire shielding. I went ahead and used the new VR since I had it already, but I could have sent it back and re-used my original VR.  Had I not been up there replacing the VR and taking the additional time to inspect the guts of the cannon plug, it would have been a nightmare never ending diagnostic. 
I was proud of my curiosity that day  

 

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