Hi everyone,
I have been working with my friend on a motor/generator that will have some special concepts incorporated. I mainly do the mechanical design and he does the electronic part, so my description will be on a general basis for the electronic implementation of the drive and coils setup.
The motor has a 1/2" main shaft from welded steel tubing and it is hanging on 1/2" ball bearings. The rotor is 6 1/2" diameter by 6" long with 8 6"X2"X1/2" ceramic grade 8 magnets.
The drive will be from 3 special design coils, matched to the magnet size, as the electronic pulsing circuit is a 3 phases unit using 3 hall effect sensors. The pulses are composed of 2 components, a primary pulse and within that pulse, a second pulsing circuit fills each of those pulses with 3k pulses per sec hash signal. It is very efficient as the tryout on a prototype got us 1,200 rpm from a 24V DC source at 0.137 Amp. The RPM can be adjusted up to 6,000 rpm. It will have 12 to 18 small pickup coils. On initial trials from the prototype, we had an output of 10V AC (Edit: That is 10 V DC, sorry for the mistake) at 0.72 Amp from one identically sized coil. Promising indeed.
I will try to post more pictures as I finalize the first of two identical units.
That is all for now, take care,
Michel
I have been working with my friend on a motor/generator that will have some special concepts incorporated. I mainly do the mechanical design and he does the electronic part, so my description will be on a general basis for the electronic implementation of the drive and coils setup.
The motor has a 1/2" main shaft from welded steel tubing and it is hanging on 1/2" ball bearings. The rotor is 6 1/2" diameter by 6" long with 8 6"X2"X1/2" ceramic grade 8 magnets.
The drive will be from 3 special design coils, matched to the magnet size, as the electronic pulsing circuit is a 3 phases unit using 3 hall effect sensors. The pulses are composed of 2 components, a primary pulse and within that pulse, a second pulsing circuit fills each of those pulses with 3k pulses per sec hash signal. It is very efficient as the tryout on a prototype got us 1,200 rpm from a 24V DC source at 0.137 Amp. The RPM can be adjusted up to 6,000 rpm. It will have 12 to 18 small pickup coils. On initial trials from the prototype, we had an output of 10V AC (Edit: That is 10 V DC, sorry for the mistake) at 0.72 Amp from one identically sized coil. Promising indeed.
I will try to post more pictures as I finalize the first of two identical units.
That is all for now, take care,
Michel
Comment