mud2005
10 kW
The throttle will take your 36 or 48 volts in
I'm runnin on 24V

The throttle will take your 36 or 48 volts in
recumpence said:My bikes are overpowered. That being the case, heat is generated, but rarely sustained because the huge wattage they produce is delivered in very short bursts. My KMX trike, for example, will be running twin 3220s. I highly doubt heat will be an issue at all. Heck, it will be tough to make the motors warm on that thing unless I am doing hard stop and go runs.
Not for a given motor speed, though...GGoodrum said:You can cut down the amount of heat generated, for a given power level, by running at a higher voltage. Heat losses go up as a square of the current, so if you could double the voltage, the current used would be half and the heat losses drastically reduced.
Miles said:Not for a given motor speed, though...GGoodrum said:You can cut down the amount of heat generated, for a given power level, by running at a higher voltage. Heat losses go up as a square of the current, so if you could double the voltage, the current used would be half and the heat losses drastically reduced.![]()
GGoodrum said:You are assuming the same wind, though. One of the big advantages of the AFs is that they have a huge selection of winds with different number of turns. You just pick one with half the kV. Same rpm, double the voltage, half the current. :wink:
recumpence said:So, a tip for you to obtain the smoothest low throttle response and performance is to wrap your BEC in foil to reduce the RF and any hesitation you may have otherwise encountered.
I will be utilizing this trick on my twist grip throttles I am building.
Matt
Miles said:GGoodrum said:You are assuming the same wind, though. One of the big advantages of the AFs is that they have a huge selection of winds with different number of turns. You just pick one with half the kV. Same rpm, double the voltage, half the current. :wink:
Same rpm, double the voltage, half the current, but what about the winding resistance? :wink:![]()
johnrobholmes said:Bob "forgot" that I wanted sensors on my 3220 that he just finshed for me. He didn't seem too happy that I pressed the issue. I won't have pedals, I can't start up without sensors!
CNCAddict said:High voltage does reduce losses in the wiring setup and interconnects, but makes very little difference in the motor.
Miles said:It is right Gary,
Voltage goes up, current goes down, winding resistance goes up - it all balances. Same amount of heat generated in the motor.
Miles said:It is right Gary,
Voltage goes up, current goes down, winding resistance goes up - it all balances. Same amount of heat generated in the motor.
liveforphysics said:Miles said:It is right Gary,
Voltage goes up, current goes down, winding resistance goes up - it all balances. Same amount of heat generated in the motor.
This is if you neglect field rise time.
I know on paper it's just a simple matter of multiplying total power in by rated efficiency, and it gives you the same amount no matter what combination of amps and volts you use to get a given power value. Due to the different rate of field rise time, I think it makes more of a difference in efficiency while a motor is in rapid acceleration. For steady state running, the controller would be able to get timing correct, and I don't see it making as much of a difference.
Statically, it's a simple 1 step math problem. Dynamically, it's pretty damn complex to see the differences between high/low voltage setups. It's going to be very close either way for inside the motor. All the losses in the rest of the system definitely favor the high voltage system.
Miles said:Here you go, Nick.
http://www.astroflight.com/pdfs/3210WEB.pdf
http://www.astroflight.com/pdfs/3220.pdf
N.B. there are lots of "typos"......