I am starting the installation of the electrical system in my Bearhawk Patrol build. I need help applying my knowledge into the workshop. Book Knowledge and Fabrication knowledge is two vastly different aspects. I want to learn the industry best practice to build this design.
I understand wiring diagrams, fundamentals of size, have chosen a basic wiring layout, done a load analysis, etc. using decades old electrical system classes from college days and recently Bob Nuckolls Aeroelectric Connection. I am using the black lines of Z101B diagram. http://www.aeroelectric.com/PPS/Adobe_Architecture_Pdfs/Z101B.pdf
For example, lets start with the Master Switch. The red arrow points to the master switch.
When the wiring is done, I want an educated electrical guy to look and say "Wow, Nice job. This will be easy to service in the future when I am 70. This inspires confidence. It's robust. I feel safe flying in this aircraft on a backcountry trip. Very Clean, Very well done.
-Do I first decide on routes that wire bundles will travel?
-Will we plan now for easy removal of a component with a service loop so things they can be removed while sitting in the seat...easy for an old guy to fix.
-Once the routing decision is made, then should I measure the route, and start building the wiring harness on a board with ends of wires 12 inches too long on each end so they can be trimmed and wire terminations installed at the components?
I build at home alone. If this is beyond the scope of the forum, my next idea is one-on-one mentoring. I can and want to pay shop rates for this access.
I understand wiring diagrams, fundamentals of size, have chosen a basic wiring layout, done a load analysis, etc. using decades old electrical system classes from college days and recently Bob Nuckolls Aeroelectric Connection. I am using the black lines of Z101B diagram. http://www.aeroelectric.com/PPS/Adobe_Architecture_Pdfs/Z101B.pdf
For example, lets start with the Master Switch. The red arrow points to the master switch.
When the wiring is done, I want an educated electrical guy to look and say "Wow, Nice job. This will be easy to service in the future when I am 70. This inspires confidence. It's robust. I feel safe flying in this aircraft on a backcountry trip. Very Clean, Very well done.
-Do I first decide on routes that wire bundles will travel?
-Will we plan now for easy removal of a component with a service loop so things they can be removed while sitting in the seat...easy for an old guy to fix.
-Once the routing decision is made, then should I measure the route, and start building the wiring harness on a board with ends of wires 12 inches too long on each end so they can be trimmed and wire terminations installed at the components?
I build at home alone. If this is beyond the scope of the forum, my next idea is one-on-one mentoring. I can and want to pay shop rates for this access.