vlittle
Active Member
- Joined
- May 7, 2006
- Messages
- 540
It's well documented that the Dynon SkyView battery is difficult to charge on the ground and needs several flight hours to bring to full charge.. I worked around this by installing a ground power port for running the SkyView and charging its battery.
Today I learned of an inflight emergency on the first flight of a friend's RV-7A. Due to a misconfiguration of the main electrical system (VPX), the alternator did not come online in flight. First flight is a very stressful time and there were a number of other alarms that masked this until the entire electrical EFIS systems shut down due to low volts and the SV backup battery could not keep it running.
There were no steam gauge back ups, but one radio lasted long enough to get his wingman to take the lead and bring him back to final approach.
The accident train was broken by the wise choice of a chase plane on first flight, but one of the contributing factors was the architectural fault of the SkyView system that makes it difficult to top up the battery on the ground.
I urge all new installations to fully charge the SkyView battery before first flight. This may require a modification to the electrical system to enable this. In my case, I have a separate 14 volt power supply, connector, breaker and relay to allow ground charging.
Vern
Today I learned of an inflight emergency on the first flight of a friend's RV-7A. Due to a misconfiguration of the main electrical system (VPX), the alternator did not come online in flight. First flight is a very stressful time and there were a number of other alarms that masked this until the entire electrical EFIS systems shut down due to low volts and the SV backup battery could not keep it running.
There were no steam gauge back ups, but one radio lasted long enough to get his wingman to take the lead and bring him back to final approach.
The accident train was broken by the wise choice of a chase plane on first flight, but one of the contributing factors was the architectural fault of the SkyView system that makes it difficult to top up the battery on the ground.
I urge all new installations to fully charge the SkyView battery before first flight. This may require a modification to the electrical system to enable this. In my case, I have a separate 14 volt power supply, connector, breaker and relay to allow ground charging.
Vern