Cactus Charlie
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- Mar 1, 2025
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- Commercial ASEL, ASES, AMEL, glider. CFI glider, ASE, Instrument.
So here's another thought @Cactus Charlie. An electrical circuit, I would imagine, is designed to limit the current that "can" flow based on wire size, length, etc. As we know, this circuit is fused and breakered at 10A. It shouldn't matter if the "receiver" (battery) can take a charge at 2A or 100A. The circuit should be designed to not push current beyond the design. Correct?
The current that flows through a wire is controlled primarily by the source voltage and the load impedance. The resistance of the wire may limit the current but it will then get hot and may catch fire.
The wire must be sized so it can pass the expected maximum current. It is never intended to be a current limiter.
Circuit breakers and fuses should be chosen to limit current to less than the maximum value that can be safely passed by the wire.
First determine the expected maximum current either from source voltage and load impedance or from the load specifications. Then select the wire size so it has adequate current margin. Then select a CB or fuse with a lower current rating than the wire can safely pass.
If your EarthX "load" can draw 15 A from a 14 V supply then the CB, fuse, or diode may trip/blow. The circuit was not designed to pass 15 A. If you increase the CB and fuse ratings the diode may blow. I have not mentioned the switch rating before since I don't know what it is.
There are tables than can be used to find appropriate wire size in AC 43.13-1B.