safe
1 GW
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2006
- Messages
- 5,681

This guy spent his whole life studying this stuff and it's still a mystery in some ways even today:
http://www.energyscience.org.uk/le/le18.htm
The bottom line is that there are losses that produce heat and they are difficult to get a handle on because they are not attributes of the motor that most people publish. (or possibly even know) It seems that the thinner the laminations of iron that you use in building the motor (and the design) the lower your eddy currents turn out to be. "Whatever" your eddy current charactoristics are when the voltage rises the eddy currents increase with the square of voltage, so at some point things go to hell really fast!


If the eddy currents are very low to begin with then you might not even notice them until the voltage hits a level that allows the curve to come into view. Once the curve becomes apparent then you're screwed because you can't raise the voltage past that point or the losses will be extreme. A while ago there was a brushless motor that had higher efficiency at 36 volts than at 48 volts and one wonders if this was the cause... :?