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  • Originally posted by Memphis View Post
    so I tried to put a brush on the flywheel shaft which I connected to the negative of the motor, and I obtained a copper contact that engages about half of the circumference of the shaft, so half a turn the motor has current, and the other half a turn does not.
    to make you understand.
    50% duty cycle

    ​​​​​​​Thx Gyula

    https://www.amazon.com/Controller-Di...%2C126&sr=8-18

    Why not buy this? We still don't know how many watts he needs. 500w or 2000w?
    https://www.amazon.com/Controller-El...s%2C126&sr=8-6
    Last edited by BroMikey; 05-28-2022, 05:14 AM.

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    • the motor is 500w, but it is a brushless, and I have seen that almost all the wpm controls are not suitable for brushless motors.

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      • Originally posted by Memphis View Post
        the motor is 500w, but it is a brushless, and I have seen that almost all the wpm controls are not suitable for brushless motors.
        In the photos it does not appear to be a BLDC. How do you know it is rated 500W? Please post pictures of motor, nameplate, and terminals or wires. Where did you get it?
        bi

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        • Memphis,

          Look at the design of your device. You have a lot of mass that you are trying to accelerate from a dead stop to the full motor rpm. The startup power requirements are too high and your motor does not have enough power to do that quickly, so no electrical circuit is going to fix that.

          The belt and pulley system you have is a power robber. The belts themselves absorb power just from flexing and the shaft bearing side load it takes for those belts to engage the pulleys is high.

          You should to reduce those loads as much as you can (chains and sprockets or toothed belts and pulleys or ?) and use some type of clutch so you can bring your motor up to speed quickly and then slowly apply power to the rotating assembly to get it up to speed.

          A loose motor belt with a tension pulley you can manually engage might do the job, and a small flywheel attached at the motor shaft might help.

          Cadman

          edit: I assumed those are v-belts, it's hard to tell. Regardless, you need to get the motor up to speed and slowly apply power to the rotating assembly.
          Last edited by Cadman; 05-28-2022, 01:29 PM.

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          • VID-20220528-WA0001.mp4.zip Cadman,
            I know that I have a lot of mass and therefore a lot of inertia at the start, but being the motor from 500w to 24v, and having calibrated the pulleys in a suitable way, it has no difficulty in picking up the motor speed, also because in the initial part of the start the alternator is disconnected and therefore the effort is minimal, within the reach of that motor (which for skeptics is a 24v - 500watt- brushless) Instead of carbon brushes I have now used a thin copper rubbing plate which seems to go better. The problem is that now, since it was a motor not for continuous duty, but max 5 minutes, during the various tests it overheated and now it no longer shows signs of life, it must probably be the electronic circuit that controls the reversal of the magnetic field. of the brushless, I will try to repair it otherwise I will take another one, but this time for continuous service.
            IMG-20220528-WA0000.jpg

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            • VID-20220528-WA0001.mp4

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              • That thing is banging. OMG and losing or wasting power from all the friction. Cadman is right a slipping the pulley for start up. Regardless of the name plate of the motor you are calling your motor, brushless, and yet it runs straight off the battery. That don't make sense.

                A brushless dc motor has 3 wires or 3 phases and a sensor. You have 2 wires so it is not a conventional brushless motor.

                It strikes me as a starter motor and you removed the rotor winding and brushes. When you removed the rotor windings was it like the alternator winding? This will help us to determine what motor you have without a name plate.

                If it runs already on 24vdc off a battery you can pulse it with almost any high efficiency scooter pwm but that won't make it OU. You might gain 10%. What you are looking for is the magic of entropy with a weighted flywheel gaining momentum from earths rotational energy.

                There is a place you can get where you collect extra inertia. My best understanding is that you get the weighted wheel moving and it takes 1X input but then upon taking energy out you get 3X or 2X output. Is this what your device is trying to do?

                If you are trying to build a flywheel motor / generator that puts out more than it takes to run it let me know.
                Last edited by BroMikey; 05-28-2022, 06:12 PM.

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                • About the REGENX

                  Let me point out why Thane is not being excepted as legit. Take a look at this statement from the Ottawa science community..........

                  " Complicating the analysis of Heins’ apparatus is the fact that he is not running his motor at full voltage and normal speed. Instead, he supplies it from a variac (a device for varying AC voltage), at a voltage well below the 120V that the motor is designed for. As a consequence, it runs at only a few hundred revolutions per minute, instead of the approximately 3500rpm"

                  And most people see this and think Thane is a huckster. Induction motor run full speed at 50vac all the way to 120vac. See how easy it is to trick you? Thane's discovery will make all of the other story book experiments look like toys. This is why Thane is rejected.

                  Rejecting an honest demo of Thane's work shows intent. Instead he is portrayed as a fraud. Here is the website of clown engineers who have no clue.

                  http://www.ottawaskeptics.org/2008/0...hermodynamics/

                  here is one more foolhardy slander

                  " Running it at such a low speed causes it to overheat,"

                  False, induction motors do not run below their rated rpm until they are severely overloaded. Thane is running his grinder motor at 150watts on up to 280watts for a 1/2hp. Clearly the people who are afraid of Thane don't do any bench work. Most go with this line of reasoning going along just to get along. The blind following the blind is so much like the masses it's laughable.

                  My 1/2hp washing machine motors top out at 9amps and that is the run load draw right on the nameplate or sticker.

                  A new day is dawning and the worry warts are going to be dumbstruck.

                  Here is Ottawa's final assessment of poor ole despised Thane based on their infinite reasoning powers that most of you agree with.

                  "Conclusion
                  Heins
                  appears earnest and basically honest, but persistently self-deluded."


                  Last edited by BroMikey; 05-28-2022, 07:09 PM.

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                  • In memory of John Bedini motor generator lee matrix been experimenting for decades.




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                    • Gentlemen, you know that there are brushless motors with 3 wires, therefore three-phase, and those with direct current, naturally with 2 wires where the rotation of the stator magnetic fields is obtained by an electronic circuit that reads the position of the rotor through a sensor.

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                      • Originally posted by Memphis View Post
                        Gentlemen, you know that there are brushless motors with 3 wires, therefore three-phase, and those with direct current, naturally with 2 wires where the rotation of the stator magnetic fields is obtained by an electronic circuit that reads the position of the rotor through a sensor.
                        Memphis,
                        please read this.

                        https://www-electricaltechnology-org...principle.html

                        Also, In the photos it does not appear to be a BLDC. How do you know it is rated 500W? Please post pictures of motor, nameplate, and terminals or wires. Where did you get it?
                        bi

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                        • Comment


                          • Originally posted by Memphis View Post
                            Photo of Hydronit motor
                            Thank you.
                            It does not appear to be a BLDC nor have any information on the label stating that. The website for Hydronit does not mention the use of BLDC and products pictured there appear to be typical brush DC motors.

                            To operate your motor, you simply hook up 2 wires to the battery, correct? That is a big clue that it is a brush type DC motor. A brushless motor (BLDC) with 2 wires would need an electronic controller inside the motor housing. That is seldom done in the size and type of motor you have, a hydraulic pump drive unit for automotive/truck/industrial applications.

                            The nameplate indicates that motor is rated for intermittent duty of 5 minutes or 15% on-time which is unlikely to stabilize thermally at any continuous load.
                            bi

                            ​​​​​​

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                            • I am mistaken, they sold me the motor as brushless, but now that I have disassembled it I have been able to see that it is actually a permanent magnet motor mounted on the stator, now I will look for the fault, otherwise I will take one truly brushless three-phase together with a wpm regulator and I solve the problem.

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