by md11flyer » Mon Oct 01, 2012 3:20 am
Michael, Yes thats how it is supposed to be wired. The circuit breaker from the Alternator feed wire to the circuit breaker panel bus bar is supposed to protect the alternator and wire from to much current flow. In your case the main circuit breaker did not do its job when the amperage exceeded the feed wire capacity.
There are several reasons this could happen, Bad connection from the feed wire to the circuit breaker. ( example if a few strands of the feed wire were broken or not properly crimped at the connector the connector would overheat at the breaker breaker when a high load was placed on it, effectively the wire is a smaller capacity wire at the point of broken strands.
Or simply a loose fastener screw holding the wire to the circuit breaker.
Another, less likely reason is the aircraft was upgraded to a higher amperage alternator and main feed circuit breaker, but the feed wire was not upgraded to a higher capacity wire. If this is the case then you must either change the circuit breaker back the original amp breaker or upgrade the wire.
But that does mot address the main problem you have and that is the excessive current draw from your landing light(s).
You can test this out yourself in the hangar. First manually exercise the landing light circuit breakers to make sure they are not melted internally from a short. Then with battery master on and all other electrics off, switch one light on at a time and take note of the the amp gauge if the gauge shows less than 10 amps per light then your light circuits are fine. If the gauge jumps full discharge quickly turn off switch and master switch as you have now found your problem circuit.
If this is the case your landing light circuit breaker must be replaced and the cause of the short traced down.
I really can't see any other reason for the landing lights putting your electrical load so high as to cause melting of a main feed line. Except if you had the pitot heat on, the radar on, gear going down, flaps going down and if you have the really old narco tube radios.... then maybe.
Good luck, and let us know what you find
BTW , I might be wrong, but your A&P can fix your electrical wiring you don't need an avionics shop.