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Voltage Stabilizer

To: MG Mailing List <mgs@autox.team.net>
Subject: Voltage Stabilizer
From: "John M. Trindle" <jtrindle@tsquare.com>
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 1996 10:37:29 -0500 (EST)
There seems to be a little confusion about the voltage stablizer and its 
properties.

1) Yes, it is a bimetallic strip which shorts between "ground" (actually 
a resistive load) when cool and passes incoming voltage when warm.  Think 
of those blinky Christmas lights.

2) Because of this the output is NOT steady.  It is SUPPOSED to oscillate 
between about 5 volts and incoming voltage.

3) So why don't your fuel gauge and temp gauge needles swing in time to the 
stabilizer?  Because they are "heavily damped".

In the case of these two gauges, the damping is thermal in nature.  
Incoming voltage (determined by supply voltage and the resistance of the 
fuel sender or temperature sender respectively) heats a resistive wire, 
like the ones in your toaster but cooler.  This heat bends a bimetallic 
strip, which moves the indicator needle!

Since the normal chopping frequency of the stabilizer is on the order of 
1 Hz, the bimetallic strip in each gauge does not have time to cool off 
and move the needle between the low and high points of the voltage cycle.

NOW, here is the really ingenious part.  Given that you have bimetallic 
gauges, what can cause inaccuracy?  Bad sender, bad ground, improper 
input voltage, and >changes in ambient temperature<.  That's right, if 
the temperature around the gauge is high, the indicator reading will be 
high.  And cool temperatures lead to an opposite effect.

Well, now.  The bimetallic "voltage stabilizer" has the same "problem".  
If the temperature around the stablizer is high, it takes longer to cool 
off and break the "ground" phase.  This means more time spent at "5 
volts" and less at "13.8 volts".

If the voltage stabilizer is exposed to the same ambient temperature as 
the gauges, it will tend to compensate for ambient temperature changes 
around the gauges!

I think because of this, a solid state voltage regulator would be a >bad< 
idea for these gauges.

As for problems, the most common is a missing ground on the stablizer.  
This causes 100% 13.8 volts to be passed to the fuel and temperature 
gauges, and BOTH will read high.

If one gauge is acting up and the other isn't, the problem is not likely 
to be in your stabilizer.

John M. Trindle | jtrindle@tsquare.com | Tidewater Sports Car Club
'73 MGB DSP     | '69 Spitfire E Stock | '88 RX-7 C Stock



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