Thanks Luke,liveforphysics said:I did some rough CADoodling to get an idea of the performance effect it would have.
I guess the ideal case is something like this:
Thanks Luke,liveforphysics said:I did some rough CADoodling to get an idea of the performance effect it would have.
Miles said:I'm not sure that it would matter that the rings weren't concentric? The lam material would only be 0.25mm thick.... Interesting idea, though.....
I was thinking to make a winding/mounting inner boss to match the spiral form.
j3tch1u said:liveforphysics said:You can see a pair of them here doing some frilly stuff.![]()
cool! 5-axis pineapple. Jesus (the carpenter) would be proud
ya mon, there are many ways to peel an apple. btw, you wrote "fluke" instead of "flute". still thinking about your $10,000 thermal imager?
Miles said:Thanks Luke,liveforphysics said:I did some rough CADoodling to get an idea of the performance effect it would have.
I guess the ideal case is something like this:
Yeh I like when it spits out the working plastic cresent wrench all as one peice!paultrafalgar said:That scanner is brilliant! Attention all fabricators on endless-sphere: watch that video. LFP will buy one! $3000 for the scanner and then the 3D printer is magic. One each of those and a casting expert and we're in business. Far out man!
You would have to reduce the surface area in the gap, too, though.............thinks.............It might be a compromise worth making to get closer to sinusoidal bEMF?j3tch1u said:miles, while you are at it, maybe you could also make a rhomboidal coil stator to see if it makes any difference in efficiency. would just need to angle your slot cuts in a X-like pattern.
I don't think there's a simple answer...HAL9000v2.0 said:Yes, something like that. Now the question is; is there benefit?
Yes, it makes a big difference. It's to increase the surface area fronting the gap. Doubling the area halves the reluctance....Malcolm said:Just looking at that stator, I'm curious, do you gain much of an advantage from narrowing the slots at the top of the core? I guess it's to close the flux path?
liveforphysics said:Are one of the requirements of your motor to have minimized cogging?![]()
Actually the cogging effect (technically known as detent)
is due to pole construction. The windings have no effect.
I used to design motor drives for large (300+ ft-lb torque)
DC brushless motors.
The cog or detent is the point at which the center of the magnets
perfectly line up with the ideal magnetic path through
the poles.
This detent can be sharp or soft depending on pole constrution.
A straght pole (no twist) along it's length will have
a sharp detent.
A twisted pole will have less. This is because for different
points along the rotor the magnetic "perfect" point is at a different
point in the rotation of the rotor.
Pole shape also has a factor in the detent amount as does air gap between the rotor and poles.
->The drawback is loss of torque, high detent motors have higher
peak torque and better efficency than low detent motors.<-
The positives are smoother operation.
I'm not sure why this should be the case, though?->The drawback is loss of torque, high detent motors have higher
peak torque and better efficency than low detent motors.<-