Peter,
Thanks,
I placed my magnets on my commutator, because I am familiar with hall devices, and I got some in home. I ran it on 18 volts drawing 250mA, and it ran around 2000 RPM, with reasonable torque, although I could stop it by my hand. As I moved my hall sensor, I found the spot at which the maximum RPM was achieved, and I found out that the maximum RPM occurred at an unexpected spot, where the rotor tends to move backwards initially, so you are right I should have cut off two more segments to get better performance. I suppose the collapsed spike was causing the rotor decrease in speed as I moved the hall sensor to a position where the rotor starts moving in forward direction. So maybe the back spike needs more space to deliver forward action instead of backward.
The collapsed spike was rather noisy when it was disconnected from the charging battery and slowed the rotor down pretty much.
I'll cut off two more segments tomorrow, and keep you informed about my progress.
Best Regards
Elias
Thanks,
I placed my magnets on my commutator, because I am familiar with hall devices, and I got some in home. I ran it on 18 volts drawing 250mA, and it ran around 2000 RPM, with reasonable torque, although I could stop it by my hand. As I moved my hall sensor, I found the spot at which the maximum RPM was achieved, and I found out that the maximum RPM occurred at an unexpected spot, where the rotor tends to move backwards initially, so you are right I should have cut off two more segments to get better performance. I suppose the collapsed spike was causing the rotor decrease in speed as I moved the hall sensor to a position where the rotor starts moving in forward direction. So maybe the back spike needs more space to deliver forward action instead of backward.
The collapsed spike was rather noisy when it was disconnected from the charging battery and slowed the rotor down pretty much.
I'll cut off two more segments tomorrow, and keep you informed about my progress.
Best Regards
Elias
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