Have any of you used (or know of someone who has used) one of these power distribution panels (by Composite Design)?
I've read some good reports elsewhere: Zenith builders forum (appears to be a standard kit component) and on VAF (one positive review, no negatives). They seem to be well made from solid components, and although they use automatically-resetting circuit breakers (which I wasn't very happy about), the designer tells me the CBs in question will NOT reset if the circuit is shorted out, or is still drawing high current. Some reasonably positive comments on the AeroElectric Connection (with no dramatic rebuttals by the experts there) sent me in this direction. The company owner is extremely responsive, and if you call him, he explains how everything works and how it should be wired up quite well. And the "consumables" (CBs, switches, etc.) are all replaceable without major headaches.
These power panels initially seemed a bit pricey, but as I added up the costs of the various switches, circuit breakers, bus bars, etc., it looks like I would only save about $100-150 doing it all myself, and would still need to do all the design, mounting, labelling, and "behind the panel" work to get to this stage. Seems like a reasonable tradeoff to me, especially given the "neatness" of the resulting installation. (Some of the same reasoning I used when I purchased the QB+ Patrol kit from Mark G...)
I'm most interested in their "LSA Power Panel" (2.375" Tall x 10.5" Wide x 6.5" Deep), versus the "Standard Power Panel" (2.25" Tall, 13.0" Wide, 7.75" Deep). The "standard" allows for 80 Amp alternators (vs 60A for the LSA), and adds a Pitot Heat switch and a "Spare" switch, plus a few additional circuit breakers (pitot heat, avionics spare, trim/autopilot, and an additional general-purpose "spare" as well). But since the LSA panel has switches for Master / Alternator, avionics master, landing, strobe and nav lights, plus a fuel pump, I think that's pretty much all I would need. (My panel will be VFR, and if I ever add a heated pitot tube, I can add the switch and CB for that reasonably easily. The CBs also seem to cover everything I would want, even if I added a 2nd EFIS, 2nd Nav or Com, etc.
They also offer a "mini" panel that is smaller, and comes in a separate package, in part because it uses a separate Master/Alternator switch/CB panel (which he is nice enough to include with the mini). But it does not have a fuel pump switch, not the two dedicated CBs for EFIS-1 and EFIS-2 – you would probably consume the "Spare" CB for a single EFIS, and I'm not sure what you'd do if you had a second EFIS.
There's also a repackaged version of the LSA panel that fits in a standard avionics stack, and is 4.25" tall... They basically stack the switches above the circuit breakers. Basically the same real estate on the panel, but narrower and taller...
Here are links to the descriptions on the Composite Designs website:
And here's a picture of the LSA Power Panel (front/top view):
LSA PP Front.png
And here's one of the "guts" of the same panel. You can see how the CBs and switches are mounted to the rack, and easily replaceable. You can also see the well-labelled "ring terminal" connectors for all of the external connections.
LSA PP Internals.JPG
So, any thoughts or inputs?
PS - I forgot to mention that this system also has a provision for a backup battery, with automated charging and engagement when the main power sources (alternator and battery) lose power. It's a $125 optional board that you add, plus a 7-10 Amp/Hr battery. They offer a 7AH battery for $40.
I've read some good reports elsewhere: Zenith builders forum (appears to be a standard kit component) and on VAF (one positive review, no negatives). They seem to be well made from solid components, and although they use automatically-resetting circuit breakers (which I wasn't very happy about), the designer tells me the CBs in question will NOT reset if the circuit is shorted out, or is still drawing high current. Some reasonably positive comments on the AeroElectric Connection (with no dramatic rebuttals by the experts there) sent me in this direction. The company owner is extremely responsive, and if you call him, he explains how everything works and how it should be wired up quite well. And the "consumables" (CBs, switches, etc.) are all replaceable without major headaches.
These power panels initially seemed a bit pricey, but as I added up the costs of the various switches, circuit breakers, bus bars, etc., it looks like I would only save about $100-150 doing it all myself, and would still need to do all the design, mounting, labelling, and "behind the panel" work to get to this stage. Seems like a reasonable tradeoff to me, especially given the "neatness" of the resulting installation. (Some of the same reasoning I used when I purchased the QB+ Patrol kit from Mark G...)
I'm most interested in their "LSA Power Panel" (2.375" Tall x 10.5" Wide x 6.5" Deep), versus the "Standard Power Panel" (2.25" Tall, 13.0" Wide, 7.75" Deep). The "standard" allows for 80 Amp alternators (vs 60A for the LSA), and adds a Pitot Heat switch and a "Spare" switch, plus a few additional circuit breakers (pitot heat, avionics spare, trim/autopilot, and an additional general-purpose "spare" as well). But since the LSA panel has switches for Master / Alternator, avionics master, landing, strobe and nav lights, plus a fuel pump, I think that's pretty much all I would need. (My panel will be VFR, and if I ever add a heated pitot tube, I can add the switch and CB for that reasonably easily. The CBs also seem to cover everything I would want, even if I added a 2nd EFIS, 2nd Nav or Com, etc.
They also offer a "mini" panel that is smaller, and comes in a separate package, in part because it uses a separate Master/Alternator switch/CB panel (which he is nice enough to include with the mini). But it does not have a fuel pump switch, not the two dedicated CBs for EFIS-1 and EFIS-2 – you would probably consume the "Spare" CB for a single EFIS, and I'm not sure what you'd do if you had a second EFIS.
There's also a repackaged version of the LSA panel that fits in a standard avionics stack, and is 4.25" tall... They basically stack the switches above the circuit breakers. Basically the same real estate on the panel, but narrower and taller...
Here are links to the descriptions on the Composite Designs website:
LSA Power Panel: https://compositedesigninc.com/lsa-power-panel
Standard Power Panel: https://compositedesigninc.com/standard-power-panel
Standard Power Panel: https://compositedesigninc.com/standard-power-panel
And here's a picture of the LSA Power Panel (front/top view):
LSA PP Front.png
And here's one of the "guts" of the same panel. You can see how the CBs and switches are mounted to the rack, and easily replaceable. You can also see the well-labelled "ring terminal" connectors for all of the external connections.
LSA PP Internals.JPG
So, any thoughts or inputs?
PS - I forgot to mention that this system also has a provision for a backup battery, with automated charging and engagement when the main power sources (alternator and battery) lose power. It's a $125 optional board that you add, plus a 7-10 Amp/Hr battery. They offer a 7AH battery for $40.
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