Axial force (here the attraction of the magnet to the coil core) doesn’t PRODUCE torque. It REQUIRES torque to overcome. Stick a magnet to a metal plate and try to push it sideways an inch.. Now take a metal bar with 12 of those magnets mounted to it and attach the magnets to a metal table top and try to push them sideways an inch.
You keep trying to put your words in my mouth. I never said cogging was caused by axial force. I said the attraction of the magnets to the cores causes cogging.
You hear what you want to hear and read what you want to read.
Any displacement of the rotor from this position (alignment of magnet to coil core) results in cogging torque which attempts to re-align the rotor to this position."
This is what the study said and I absolutely agree. Don't you? It was YOUR study. You found it. You don't want to have a discussion. You want to trick me into trying to defend a position I have never taken.
Besides, axial force is defined (I believe and could be wrong) basically force parallel to the axis. We are dealing with MORE than just an axial force here. Take your lazy susan in your video, glue a big magnet on the plastic, and then see how well it rotates past that metal frame. The weight of the magnet would be your axial force would it not? BUT WHAT IS THE ATTRACTION TO THE MAGNET? IF YOU WANT TO CALL THAT AXIAL FORCE, FINE, BECAUSE IT PROBABLY IS, BUT NOW YOU HAVE A PROBLEM DON'T YOU? It will require some "torque" to overcome.
You keep trying to put your words in my mouth. I never said cogging was caused by axial force. I said the attraction of the magnets to the cores causes cogging.
You hear what you want to hear and read what you want to read.
Any displacement of the rotor from this position (alignment of magnet to coil core) results in cogging torque which attempts to re-align the rotor to this position."
This is what the study said and I absolutely agree. Don't you? It was YOUR study. You found it. You don't want to have a discussion. You want to trick me into trying to defend a position I have never taken.
Besides, axial force is defined (I believe and could be wrong) basically force parallel to the axis. We are dealing with MORE than just an axial force here. Take your lazy susan in your video, glue a big magnet on the plastic, and then see how well it rotates past that metal frame. The weight of the magnet would be your axial force would it not? BUT WHAT IS THE ATTRACTION TO THE MAGNET? IF YOU WANT TO CALL THAT AXIAL FORCE, FINE, BECAUSE IT PROBABLY IS, BUT NOW YOU HAVE A PROBLEM DON'T YOU? It will require some "torque" to overcome.
Comment