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  1. #1
    Senior Member Kitfox Pilot's Avatar
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    Default Avionics question

    Remember I know nothing much on this subject and am laying out my garmin supplies in the plane.
    I need aft weigh and my question is what items should I not put in the back, behind the seat area, of the plane?
    Below is the list of items to mount.
    Autopilot servos are all ready in and the gmu 11 is out in the wing and g3x and 507 are on the panel.
    Battery is going behind the baggage compartment and I'd like to mount the vp-x behind the seat??


    Left to mount is gsu 25, gtr20 remote com radio, gdl 50 adsb in, gea 24 engine monitor. Any of these need to be up front?


    I'm not mounting a transponder or adsb out at this time. Thanks
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    Last edited by Kitfox Pilot; 03-18-2021 at 06:51 PM.
    Harlan and Susan Payne
    Flying FarmFox STI Kitfox N61HP
    Rotax 915is, Airmaster prop.
    https://www.youtube.com/@KitfoxPilot/videos

  2. #2
    Senior Member Delta Whisky's Avatar
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    Default Re: Avionics question

    Harlan - I don't know any specifics about the GEA 24 but if thermocouple wires go direct to it, you probably would be better off keeping it closer to the firewall then behind the seats. Maybe a Garmin guy will weigh in.

  3. #3
    Senior Member jiott's Avatar
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    Default Re: Avionics question

    If you have not yet decided on engine/prop, I don't see how you can possibly decide where to mount the items you mentioned for proper cg location. Maybe I missed it and you have settled on engine/prop?
    Jim Ott
    Portland, OR
    Kitfox SS7 flying
    Rotax 912ULS

  4. #4
    Senior Member Kitfox Pilot's Avatar
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    Default

    Ok this is the kind of info I need because I've never done it.
    Thanks for all the info.
    Would you keep the battery behind the baggage compartment? I never did like long battery cables from batteries to the engine. The earth x batteries are lite but still the heaviest thing and longest arm from cg.
    But If a 5 lb weight on the tailwheel saves me a lot of trouble, that's what I'll do.


    One more thing , does the ground bar attach to the battery ground? I'm just wondering where all the grounds go if my battery is in the back?
    Harlan and Susan Payne
    Flying FarmFox STI Kitfox N61HP
    Rotax 915is, Airmaster prop.
    https://www.youtube.com/@KitfoxPilot/videos

  5. #5
    Senior Member Eric Page's Avatar
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    Default Re: Avionics question

    Quote Originally Posted by Kitfox Pilot View Post
    One more thing, does the ground bar attach to the battery ground? I'm just wondering where all the grounds go if my battery is in the back?
    I have to agree with Phil. Unless you use thick (heavy) wires, you'll be a lot happier with starter performance if the battery is up front.

    Regarding VP-X location, putting it behind the seat opens a can of worms. Where would items powered by the VP-X be grounded? Ideally there would be a ground bus bar near the VP-X, but that would mean a second wire run to the negative post on the battery, or another long thick wire from the firewall to the aft ground point. Then you'd have two major ground points in the plane and depending on currents in those wires, there could be a voltage difference between them.

    That can cause sensor inaccuracy if the engine monitor box has a different ground point than the EFIS. Grounding the engine monitor in the back with the EFIS could solve the problem, but that scheme would be defeated by any sensor whose metal case is internally connected to ground and also touches the engine. Grounding the EFIS up front would fix the problem too, but that might cause data errors if remote devices that communicate with the EFIS are grounded in the tail. Those errors might only happen with certain high-current devices turned on, making them very hard to diagnose. Imagine a varying difference in ground potential as wig-wag landing lights attached to the aft ground point blink on and off.

    Generally speaking, I would follow three guidelines for grounding:

    1. For any device you install, provide only one path to ground.
    2. If a device communicates with another device, ground both in the same location.
    3. Shielded cables should have their shields grounded at only one end.

    #3 applies to all shielded wires, whether you're talking about control lines to a remote radio, GPS position data to a transponder/ADS-B, control signals to a servo, microphone/headphone jacks or an intercom's music input. Ground the shield only at one end to avoid ground loops and to protect devices from high currents in the shield in the event of a broken ground wire.

    My advice -- which is worth what you're paying for it! -- would be to put the VP-X behind the instrument panel and use a single-point firewall ground. With the VP-X up front you'll save weight and considerable complexity in wiring, and you'll avoid sensor and data-comm issues due to unequal ground potentials. Plus, adding a little weight way back in the tail will be easier, cheaper -- and my guess: less total weight -- than all of the extra wiring involved in putting the VP-X behind the seat.

    You might want to call Kitfox and talk to John or Brandon about these two issues. They've done 915 installations, so they probably have a pretty good idea how the balance works out.
    Eric Page
    Building: Kitfox 5 Safari | Rotax 912iS | Dynon HDX
    Member: EAA Lifetime, AOPA, ALPA
    ATP: AMEL | Comm: ASEL, Glider | ATCS: CTO
    Map of Landings

  6. #6
    Senior Member Kitfox Pilot's Avatar
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    Default Re: Avionics question

    915 engine , airmaster prop.
    Harlan and Susan Payne
    Flying FarmFox STI Kitfox N61HP
    Rotax 915is, Airmaster prop.
    https://www.youtube.com/@KitfoxPilot/videos

  7. #7
    Senior Member PapuaPilot's Avatar
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    Default Re: Avionics question

    It is really best to keep your heavy battery cables as short as possible, which would mean putting it by the firewall. Long cables loose voltage, especially when starting the engine. I used to have an Odyssey battery in the tail and always had a hard time starting. Now I have an EarthX behind my firewall with only 1' runs to the battery contactor, starter contactor and airframe ground. I could not believe the difference it made is starting the engine.
    Phil Nelson
    A&P-IA, Maintenance Instructor
    KF 5 Outback, Cont. IO-240
    Flying since 2016

  8. #8
    Senior Member Kitfox Pilot's Avatar
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    Default Re: Avionics question

    I had a Grumman tr2 for a first plane with the battery under the hood and you could almost taxi on the starter. Piper archer for the last 27 years and never has cranked good with the battery in the back. we changed out the aluminum cables for copper a couple years ago and it helped but still nothing like having battery close. We run into the same problem on some farm machinery with long cables.
    I hoped rotax didn't pull as much amps to start as what I am used to because I know there are lots of batteries in the back of the kitfoxes.
    I know close is better on batteries but I know I need weight in the rear too.

    I also noticed the earth x battery was only 4 lbs so not near as much gain moving it around either.
    Harlan and Susan Payne
    Flying FarmFox STI Kitfox N61HP
    Rotax 915is, Airmaster prop.
    https://www.youtube.com/@KitfoxPilot/videos

  9. #9
    Senior Member efwd's Avatar
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    Default Re: Avionics question

    Keep the GEA 24 up front. It doesn't weight anything, so no significant penalty there. The GSU 25 has mounting holes right in the back of the G3X if you want. Downfall to that is you have to run pitot tube hose all the way to the firewall and up to the back of the panel. Just gets crowded that's all.
    Eddie Forward
    Flying
    SS7, 912iS, Garmin G3X

  10. #10
    Senior Member PapuaPilot's Avatar
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    Default Re: Avionics question

    I have a G3X and would recommend mounting the GEA-24 between the firewall and instrument panel. It is the unit that all the sensors & inputs are connected to and it only weighs 1.6#. If you put it into the tail then you have to run all of your engine sensor wiring to the tail, which adds uneeded weight.

    The only other things (other than the A/P servos) that you can put in the tail would be the GTR-20 remote COM, the GDL-50 ADSB and GA-35 antenna. I put my GSU-25 in the tail to keep the static port runs to a minimum.

    I don't see a transponder on your list. Are you planning on one and ADSB-In? There are remote transponders that could be mounted in the tail, which can be controlled by the G3X.

    Also, the ELT can be mounted in the tail.
    Phil Nelson
    A&P-IA, Maintenance Instructor
    KF 5 Outback, Cont. IO-240
    Flying since 2016

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