At 11:20 AM 11/15/2009, you wrote:
>
>Thanks, guys :-)
>
>Sounds like I'll get some stranded wire for this. My panel ground is
>located on the under side of the permanantly mounted glare shield.
>It's a few inches away from the main buss block, whose piano hinge
>sections can be seen in the pic.
>
>Regarding the panel ground buss, I have used a section of the B&C
>forest of tabs. It would be convenient to rivet the brass block to
>the glare shield and use one of the tabs to connect to the firewall.
>Would using a faston for 10awg wire here be okay, or would it be
>better to solder it, or both? I'd rather not have an ugly bolt head
>on top of the glare shield.
>
>If I solder without the female faston, would I just drill a hole in
>one of the tabs big enough for the bare wire to go through and
>solder it like that?
>
>If soldering isn't as good as a ring to bolt connection, I'd prolly
>make a little standoff bracket for the panel ground.
The common point ground for stuff mounted on the
instrument panel generally needs a LOT of places
to attach ground wires. Further, these are seldom
larger wires than 20AWG. This is why the D-Sub
ground connector was proposed.
http://aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Grounding/AVG_RA.jpg
http://aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Grounding/Avionics_Bus_3.jpg
This technique is much more compact than the
forest-of-tabs product . . . and is best located
on the panel - centrally located to the majority
of devices requiring ground attachments.
You can fabricate your own ground connector
using techniques illustrated here
http://aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Grounding/Minibus1.jpg
http://aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Grounding/Minibus2.jpg
This example was produced to offer a means by
which lots of instrument lights could be connected
to a single dimmer. Obviously, if used only as
a single point ground, you don't need two-circuits
on the connector. Solder TWO 12AWG grounds to the
row of pins and terminate each 12AWG on it's own
tab at the forest-of-tabs block on the firewall.
Bob . . .