I'm having an electrical problem in my PA-30 at the very end of gear retraction, when everything else is on during an IFR departure. With everything on (pitot heat, landing lights, beacons, nav lights, fuel pumps - everything required for IFR departure), when I retract the gear, the circuit breaker trips at the very end of the retraction cycle. The red light (full retraction) doesn't come on. If I reset the breaker there is a split second lapse, and the light comes on. I get normal retraction with a VFR departure whether at night or during the day. I put it up on jacks and cycled the gear and the problem doesn't show up, but of course all of the 'extras' aren't on because I was on battery power only. The gear motor didn't get warm with these retractions. Upon inspection the main gear bunges were quite weak and were replaced, but that didn't resolve the CB problem. The CB also trips if I have throttled back on an IFR approach and put on the landing lights before lowering the gear.
I thought it might be an issue of tired alternators (I have the 50 amp.) that weren't putting out sufficient voltage, which would increase the amperage drawn when the gear motor is running and therefore might trip the 30 amp. breaker. I have checked the voltage from the alternators at 1100 rpm and 1600 rpm and there is no difference with rpm or when both alternators are on, or either is on alone. Ample voltage and approximately the same between the alternators.
Now I'm thinking it might be a tired circuit breaker as the gear motor CB is original Piper issue from 1966.
It has also been suggested that I might have a tired battery, but I don't see how that might be the problem because there is ample juice for starting the plane, and on takeoff one is at full throttle and should be able to run on the alternators alone - the condition of the battery at that point shouldn't be an issue. Am I wrong?
Another option might be to install 70 amp. alternators, but insufficient amperage doesn't seem to be the problem. With both alternators working properly, 100 amps. should be plenty. As well, the conditions under which the CB trips may not have common elements.
Suggestions?