I am trying to understand something about the external power plug wiring. Mine is hooked up so after you plug in the external power with power to it, you must turn on the Master Switch for the panel to come on and to start the engines. Some airplanes, like some Cessnas, I hear, have the external power plug wired so when you plug in the external plug and apply power, the Master Switch is bypassed and the panel comes alive, able to use the starter with the Master Switch off.
In my case, I believe the battery remains in the circuit after the power is applied via the external power plug.
What I am having difficulty understanding when my external power plug is connected with power (I use a StartPac) and the Master Switch is turned on, I will see a 10 or 12 amp discharge on my EI VA-1A Volt/Ammeter, yet almost no amps will be going through the StartPac DC wires to the power plug as measured by my Fluke clamp ammeter, at least in the beginning. The VA-1A is wired to only come on with the Avionics Master Switch on (which I am having changed to come on with the Master Switch). The voltage will only be up to 13 volts while the avionic are on. I would expect the Voltage to be 13.9 V like I see with when the alternators are charging and the avionics are on. I would expect the StartPac to immediately try to bring the voltage in the circuit up to 14.2.
The StartPac specs state the unit outputs up to 50 amps of 14.2V DC current. That is a lot of current, equal to one of my alternators at 100% rated output. I guess I am confused as to why the Volt/ammeter reads a higher voltage with the alternators running (which the ammeter says are only putting out 3-4 amps) when the StartPac connected via the external power plug only gets a voltage reading of 13 V. Does it have something to do with where in the circuit the Voltage is being measured?
I know this is a bit lengthy and obtuse, but if anyone has some insight, I would appreciate your input so I might understand what is going on.I saw the same thing before I had the external power plug components changed. The gear was swung with a Red Baron power supply connected, but I did not see any amps being delivered by the Red Baron. I wonder if the external power supplies deliver power differently in airplane where the circuit bypasses the battery and goes directly to the main bus?