• Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!

  • Microsoft MSN, Live, Hotmail, Outlook email users may not be receiving emails. We are working to resolve this issue. Please add support@steelsoldiers.com to your trusted contacts.

 

need electric schematic for M1084 A0

SausageGuy

Active member
117
35
28
Location
Kansas City MO
I am surprised you found A1 scematics because I thought those were in electronic format only and lots of people have been looking for them.
The ones in the TMs that are online are usually the A0.
 

Ronmar

Well-known member
3,280
6,624
113
Location
Port angeles wa
I am surprised you found A1 scematics because I thought those were in electronic format only and lots of people have been looking for them.
The ones in the TMs that are online are usually the A0.
There is one A1 schematic here on SS in the manuals section under present conflict vehicles, end of page 1 or start of page 2 near the 1078 A0 manuals…
 

Ronmar

Well-known member
3,280
6,624
113
Location
Port angeles wa
alternator problem. Shit
A few things to rule out as the alt doesn’t output until it gets turned on by K11, which de-energizes when the engine sees 15psi of oil pressure. Since it uses the de-energized contacts of K11(pin30-47A), K11 must be a 5 pin relay. The relay shifts power down thru Kll to the forward terminal on the voltage reg. If you have a bad connection K11 might not be passing enough power down to the regulator to bring it on line. So I would look for battery 24V on the forward terminal on the voltage reg. If it is not there, you can put it there using a small jumper wire from the alt 24V output terminal to the regulator. This should bring the alt online then you need to find out what is wrong with the excitation circuit.
 

Third From Texas

Well-known member
2,704
6,327
113
Location
Corpus Christi Texas

Ronmar

Well-known member
3,280
6,624
113
Location
Port angeles wa
Example:
"Refurbished" LMTV dual voltage alt on BEay = $2000

New N1307 = $300
Step down= $10
$10 stepdown? Please share, or was this a typo? I was figuring $100-200 for a bussman 100A converter to provide 12V. Still an order of magnitude cheaper than most all of the surplus dual volts available, and a straight 24V battery bank will last a good long time without fudzing with the 12v in the middle…
 

Ronmar

Well-known member
3,280
6,624
113
Location
Port angeles wa
I was thinking a simple 24v to 12v step down would do the job.

I guess price would be determined by how many amps you needed for that run.


They appear to be about $10 for every 10amps.
It will if you pay attention to some details:

The main control relay that provides 24V switched/ignition power, is actually energized by 12V. So whatever power converter is used, you want to have a low cutoff voltage, otherwise it may shutoff the main relay when you try to crank. These switching power supplies typically can run the supply as low as 25-30% above the output voltage but you need to see the specs to insure that. Have had a bad connection limit loaded voltage so the truck just sat there and went click click click when the start button was pressed. I imagine it might do something similar if the supply to the converter dropped below the cutoff voltage during a crank. I have thought about shifting that instrunment relay control power to 24V and using a 24v relay…

The lighting load on a M1079 is as high as 33A, 26A on a 1078, the total load is a little north of those 2 figures respectively, plus whatever 12v accessories you choose to add. So you need one big enough to meet the total 12V load by enough to keep at a reasonable sustained load level.

Once you go north of about 40A the costs start to close on and surpass $100 you could split the 12V buss up and use smaller power supplies to power different legs… you can get sealed/potted water resistant heat-synced 25A versions for $29…

Typically when they say 12v output, they mean exactly 12.0 VDC. 12.0V is a little on the low side of a typical 12v automotive system At 14-15V when running. Everything will work, but it will just pull a little more current, so something to be aware of. A unit with an adjustable output would be my preferred…

Like an unloaded inverter will put a load on their source even when no load is connected to them, so you would need to disconnect these units completely When not in use. You could use a large relay to control the input to the converter so it shuts off when the main switch is secured. 50A @ 12V = 25A at 24V plus efficiency losses, so not even a really serious relay To do this.

The Bussman gets around a few of these as it doesn’t output 12, it outputs 1/2 of the input, so doesn’t have the input cutoff limit issue, as input goes down say while cranking, so does the output, just like it would with batteries. It is also 100A, so it won’t be operating at max output. but I believe it may still vampire power without a disconnect in there somewhere…

nothing terribly difficult and still WAY cheaper than a replacement dual volt in most cases…
 
Last edited:

Ronmar

Well-known member
3,280
6,624
113
Location
Port angeles wa
Victron makes a 70A unit with adjustable output and a remote on/off feature for about $140 so you would not need a relay in the main circuit. It’s cutoff voltage is 18V which might start to tickle the limits during a cold engine crank, but if the main power circuit was shifted to 24V it would not really be an issue while starting and the radio lockout relay could be used to control this supply and keep it offline while the engine was cranking…

 

coachgeo

Well-known member
4,972
3,341
113
Location
North of Cincy OH
Example:
"Refurbished" LMTV dual voltage alt on BEay = $2000

New N1307 = $300
Step down= $10
would the ears etc. of the N1307 even come close to fitting 3116 mount?

and the regulator has a vehicle harness... assume that is why you need schematic... what in harness is the excite wire? what else may snag using this alt hidden in that harness?
 

Attachments

Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!

I've Disabled AdBlock
No Thanks