Miles said:Specific Km: 0.44
Could that be true? it's more than the C80100. This 0,84 kg motor is going to have better efficiency at 5kW than the 1,84kg C80100?
Miles said:Specific Km: 0.44
georg2410 said:Hi All,
after reading through the biggest thread with over 70 pages, I got stuck to the idea of starting a friction drive conversion of my old bikes, too. Great job you did up to now ... wonderful forum
I would like to ask the specialists among you :
Has anybody already gained some experience, or even measurements, with the Turnigy SK3-6374, especially with the KV149 version ?
HK's technical data is somehow confusing (1265 g weight in the product list, 840g in the product details page), and also the 21mOhm resistance looks very low, compared to anything we've ever seen on stock 6374 motors of most cheap CN-brands.
If all published data is true, this looks the most suitable motor ever for the outrunner friction drive, having lots of reserves even for steep hills.
Many thanks in advance for any information about these new motors.
Georg
4-wire method is the best, you have just described it. As long as the current is steady and the coil doesn't heat up too much. 1~2A is enough to get a good estimate.adrian_sm said:Guess I could put one phase in series while I charge a battery.
- measure current
- measure voltage drop
What is the best way to measure it?
full-throttle said:4-wire method is the best, you have just described it. As long as the current is steady and the coil doesn't heat up too much. 1~2A is enough to get a good estimate.adrian_sm said:Guess I could put one phase in series while I charge a battery.
- measure current
- measure voltage drop
What is the best way to measure it?
Since the motor is delta-terminated phase resistance is 1.5x of what you'd measure. Do you need to account for that Miles?
Miles said:That seems close enough to the specification given. Assuming the Kv is actually 190 rpm/V that gives a Km of 0.29 So, a specific Km of 0.42
Thanks, that's close enough to 29mOhm claimedadrian_sm said:Hope you only wanted ball park figures.
1.0 Amps => 0.030 Volts
2.0 Amps => 0.059 Volts
3.0 Amps => 0.087 Volts