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From the Rolls-Royce experimental archive: a quarter of a million communications from Rolls-Royce, 1906 to 1960's. Documents from the Sir Henry Royce Memorial Foundation (SHRMF).
Proposed modification to an electrical charging system and its indicator lamp scheme.

Identifier  ExFiles\Box 60\3\  Scan033
Date  8th March 1928 guessed
  
-2- Contd.

have now (only comparatively recently) been returned from
customers with armature contacts badly burnt through the
armature breaking first, we think that this slight modifica-
tion should be adopted as standard forthwith.

Returning to the green lamp scheme, it is to be
noted that when the green lamp lights up and the charging
switch is put off, the green lamp goes out unless the shunt
swi coil of its operating switch unit is connected like the
auto switch shunt coil and (also) the charge is switched off
by an additional field switch. There is no indication as to
when to put the charge on again, but connected and arranged
as described, the green lamp could remain on. A further
point to note is that in view of the fact of working through
the human element, the green lamp scheme does not give the
instantaneous protection to the system necessary to prevent
the lamps being burnt out if the battery circuit becomes
broken. On the other hand, the green lamp scheme, connected
in a way differing from that of the auto switch, offers the
possibility of including in its indications of broken dynamo-
battery circuit, that portion of the circuit through the
cutout contacts, i.e. anywhere except the portion between
distribution box negative terminal A and the surface of the
dynamo commutator under the negative brush. It can give
warning of break anywhere, i.e. inclusive of the negative
brush to commutator connection, if the operating coil of the
green lamp switch be connected as a shunt across the field
coil of the dynamo, but this would require the complication
of the provision of an extra terminal and wire.

GTD/DW
  
  


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