by Matt Bogard » Wed May 20, 2015 8:54 pm
I had some problems with my STEC 60-2 not holding altitude last summer. I sent the computer in and it got a clean bill. The plane then went to Arnold Hill at Des Moines Flight Services who did some great old-school troubleshooting. There were several pins in the rack that were loose, a couple connectors, and a ground screw. Much better approach than replacing parts until everything worked. I recommend them in a heartbeat!
This is the log entry:
Removed S-Tec 0111 altitude module for testing. Put unit on bench and supplied plus 10 VDC and tested module for stable and proper output. Verified module appears to work correctly. After reinstalling Altitude Module, installed S-Tec Break-Out box in aircraft for testing of a/p system. Found + 10 volts DC output from pitch computer to altitude module is good, tested voltage at module, found altitude variable input to Pitch Flight Guidance Computer good at computer, Tested for proper 14 Volts DC power at Both Pitch and Roll computers, tested for proper grounds at both pitch and roll computers found ground connections were loose , tested for proper Regulated 10 volts DC from both pitch and roll computers to Mode controller, tested good. Tested Pin tensions in Pitch Flight Guidance Computer rack Found several loose pins and replaced. Tested pin tensions at mode controller found several weak and replaced. Tested all interconnect wiring between A/P mode Controller and Pitch Flight Guidance computer. Tested Start voltage on Pitch Servo, found servo starts at 1.5 VDC, burnt motor in and re-tested motor now starts at 1.1 volts DC.
Ramp tested in accordance with S-Tec 60.2 Pilots Operating Handbook Part Number 8783, 2nd Edition Dated 1 November 2001 Section 4 Pre-Flight tests system passed.