As I understand it, BEMF is an electrical voltage that is generated in a wire or coil of a motor that opposes the current and voltage powering the motor.
any wire or coil passing through a magnetic field will have EMF generated in it in exactly the same way as BEMF is generated
If the magnetic field, or the wire are not moving in respect to each other, there is no current
Any current passing through a wire generates a magnetic field
If a magnetic field is building or collapsing it will generate emf in a wire in that field
Of course any movements of currents generated in a wire in a magnetic field will have a magnetic interaction with that magnetic field
It is argued that inductive kickback is generated by field collapse; however that does not explain the transient voltage spike spike that occurs at the moment of collapse
My explanation is as follows. When an electron enters into a wire we create a negatively charged pole. By the Laws of attraction, anything positively charged will be attracted and anything negative will be repelled. When that electron leaves, the wire is for a moment, charged positively by what has been attracted and so the reverse law of attraction happens. It has been proven by experiment that some of this positive charge can be used to charge batteries and capacitors but yet little or no current flows. This is a second source of energy to be found in a pulsed coil. This must not be mistaken for the inductive kickback caused by the magnetic field collapse. Inductive kickback cannot be of a higher potential (voltage) than the power that created it. The higher voltage measured on inductive kickback is actually this second input. It is only momentary spike whereas the inductive kickback lasts a much longer period of time and has current. If you have a better explanation please tell me.
any wire or coil passing through a magnetic field will have EMF generated in it in exactly the same way as BEMF is generated
If the magnetic field, or the wire are not moving in respect to each other, there is no current
Any current passing through a wire generates a magnetic field
If a magnetic field is building or collapsing it will generate emf in a wire in that field
Of course any movements of currents generated in a wire in a magnetic field will have a magnetic interaction with that magnetic field
It is argued that inductive kickback is generated by field collapse; however that does not explain the transient voltage spike spike that occurs at the moment of collapse
My explanation is as follows. When an electron enters into a wire we create a negatively charged pole. By the Laws of attraction, anything positively charged will be attracted and anything negative will be repelled. When that electron leaves, the wire is for a moment, charged positively by what has been attracted and so the reverse law of attraction happens. It has been proven by experiment that some of this positive charge can be used to charge batteries and capacitors but yet little or no current flows. This is a second source of energy to be found in a pulsed coil. This must not be mistaken for the inductive kickback caused by the magnetic field collapse. Inductive kickback cannot be of a higher potential (voltage) than the power that created it. The higher voltage measured on inductive kickback is actually this second input. It is only momentary spike whereas the inductive kickback lasts a much longer period of time and has current. If you have a better explanation please tell me.
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