9 Terminal Lucas Regulator Replacement Project
Posted: Sun Feb 14, 2016 10:01 pm
Hello, Kam here. I'm new. I'm also restoring TC5086. She is coming along slowly slowly, but well.
I'm a computer engineering student (well, almost done), and I do a lot of Electrical Engineering stuff in my spare time, and in my work. Electron pushing is my thing.
Lucas stuff horrifies me. I am de-lucasing the entire car. This is a combination of my desire to A- Not have anything Lucas. B- Not have anyting Lucas. C- because I can. D- Because I wanna.
Anyway, I have been awake for the past... dunno, 60 hours at a hackathon event, and my project (which lost -- possibly because no one understood it) was reverse engineering and subsequently re-designing the Lucas 9 terminal regulator.
Presently, the status of the project is as follows:
I was poured through the "documentation" about the regulator, and after doing a lot of experimentation- I was able to figure out how it works-- at least enough.
I designed a circuit, then simplified it, using a single inexpensive analog electric chip which monitors the output of the generator and can activate or de-activate relays depending on various conditions.
The above circuit was then modified such that it could be used on the positive ground system and monitor the negative voltages the car uses.
The circuit was then tweaked and made conveniently adjustable for battery voltage that it will regulate towards, drop in/drop out voltage of the cutout relay.
Presently my regulator uses two $3.95 auto relays (which are a little slow)- I might work now on a solid-state regulator with transistors-- which won't tick, or a faster relay (which will tick).
I then went and fixed what I thought was a horrible problem, that the dash Ign warning light- if it burns out will cause the car to not have electricity. This is no longer the case, but the ign warning light still works, and could now also be replaced with an LED, or a lower draw light bulb (like a 28 volt bulb for longer life)
The new circuit draws a lot less power than the original regulator, and is also significantly less expensive. My prototype has about $12 worth of electronics in it. In total, it is a complete drop-in replacement for the lucas unit, and is pin-for-pin compatible with the 9-terminal regulator as original.
I plan on continuing on the design of this all to make a regulator that works a little bit faster than my circuit does now. I am considering designing a PCB (printed circuit board), and possibly selling it.
I might make this as a simple bag of parts you solder up yourself style kit, or an assembled product. Currently, the amount of electronics used was small enough that it would be super easy to fit it in a housing styled to look like the original, but having that made would require a significant consumer interest for me to be able to do it, it would be expensive.
Anyway, I would like to gather the TA/TB/TC community's thoughts on the subject, and I will keep posting here about this project, and my TC as well as things move right along.
Here's my prototype (not in box yet) happily clicking away on video.
I had it configured to output ~9v here because my matco impact driver did not have enough oomph to make reasonable amounts of 12 v output on the generator.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N4ptALA_s8M
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/N4ptALA_s8M" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
I'm a computer engineering student (well, almost done), and I do a lot of Electrical Engineering stuff in my spare time, and in my work. Electron pushing is my thing.
Lucas stuff horrifies me. I am de-lucasing the entire car. This is a combination of my desire to A- Not have anything Lucas. B- Not have anyting Lucas. C- because I can. D- Because I wanna.
Anyway, I have been awake for the past... dunno, 60 hours at a hackathon event, and my project (which lost -- possibly because no one understood it) was reverse engineering and subsequently re-designing the Lucas 9 terminal regulator.
Presently, the status of the project is as follows:
I was poured through the "documentation" about the regulator, and after doing a lot of experimentation- I was able to figure out how it works-- at least enough.
I designed a circuit, then simplified it, using a single inexpensive analog electric chip which monitors the output of the generator and can activate or de-activate relays depending on various conditions.
The above circuit was then modified such that it could be used on the positive ground system and monitor the negative voltages the car uses.
The circuit was then tweaked and made conveniently adjustable for battery voltage that it will regulate towards, drop in/drop out voltage of the cutout relay.
Presently my regulator uses two $3.95 auto relays (which are a little slow)- I might work now on a solid-state regulator with transistors-- which won't tick, or a faster relay (which will tick).
I then went and fixed what I thought was a horrible problem, that the dash Ign warning light- if it burns out will cause the car to not have electricity. This is no longer the case, but the ign warning light still works, and could now also be replaced with an LED, or a lower draw light bulb (like a 28 volt bulb for longer life)
The new circuit draws a lot less power than the original regulator, and is also significantly less expensive. My prototype has about $12 worth of electronics in it. In total, it is a complete drop-in replacement for the lucas unit, and is pin-for-pin compatible with the 9-terminal regulator as original.
I plan on continuing on the design of this all to make a regulator that works a little bit faster than my circuit does now. I am considering designing a PCB (printed circuit board), and possibly selling it.
I might make this as a simple bag of parts you solder up yourself style kit, or an assembled product. Currently, the amount of electronics used was small enough that it would be super easy to fit it in a housing styled to look like the original, but having that made would require a significant consumer interest for me to be able to do it, it would be expensive.
Anyway, I would like to gather the TA/TB/TC community's thoughts on the subject, and I will keep posting here about this project, and my TC as well as things move right along.
Here's my prototype (not in box yet) happily clicking away on video.
I had it configured to output ~9v here because my matco impact driver did not have enough oomph to make reasonable amounts of 12 v output on the generator.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N4ptALA_s8M
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/N4ptALA_s8M" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>