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Old 2nd Jul 2019, 22:41
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Originally Posted by Europa01
If I read 27-41 correctly in Smythe's #951 post, the 8 -9 contacts are the FCC (and hence MCAS) route direct to the Eaton stab motor. As has been discussed this item is clearly more than just a motor and very little information about its architecture seems to be available. Terms such as 'processor based' could mean anything but are probably chosen carefully and probably don't mean microprocessor controlled. In my industry (nuclear) there are rigorous technical protocols for assessing and verifying embedded software on safety critical equipment and I'd be astonished if there is not something very similar in aerospace.



Yeah, the fact that the cutout switches are not wired identically in series is a bit strange. It's almost like somebody told the person responsible for the design "you have 5 minute to finish the damn thing, stop messing around with it and let's make it final, we have a deadline.". Anyway, about what the connections through the cutout switches seem to do:

1. connections 2 - 3 are wired in series between the two cutout switches, and are connected to the rest of the circuit in such a way that either of the cutout switches would do two things when used:
- interrupt the power between the circuit breakers and the thumb switches, making the thumb switches inoperable;
- de-energize the relay that connects the 3 phase 115V AC power to the trim motor, basically disconnecting the motor from AC power.

This means just cutting connection 2 - 3 on any of the two switches is enough to disable both manual and automatic electric trim.

2. connections 5 - 6 are wired in series as well between the two switches, and it seems that, if any of the two cutout switches are used, it would interrupt a 28V signal to the FCC, probably indicating to the FCC that the cutout switches have been used. No idea what the FCC will do based on that information.

3. connections 8 - 9 are wired only on the primary cutout switch, and as you said they seem to connect the FCC to the trim motor in some way. No idea why they don't go through the backup cutout switch as well, and exactly what signal they carry between the FCC and the motor. It almost looks like somebody forgot to route that connection through the second cutout switch. I don't see any reason for that.
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