spinningmagnets
100 TW
We've all seen the video with the rooms full of ladies with slender fingers wrapping copper wire around the stator-teeth. I've been curious for a while about "high end" electric motors where automation would someday be applied to the assembly of motors.
Porsche 918 Spyder hybrid (BLDC permanent magnet outrunner/giant RC scale?)
https://youtu.be/ZSiR5quGMi8?t=374
BMW i3 electric car (stator is shown immediately, rotor at 3:40, permanent magnet inrunner, see how the rotor sections float at 4:14)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x3brfAEs_RY
[youtube]x3brfAEs_RY[/youtube]
Looking for an assembly video of the GM Volt "hairpin" style motor (easy to wind?)
The smaller "Chevy Spark" motor is also a hairpin style. by using high volts, it provides good torque from lower RPMs, which apparently allows GM to use a permanent magnet rotor, or...to swap to an induction rotor with no changes to the power or the size/shape of the inrunner stator (plus no changes to any potential oil-cooling shroud). They seemed to indicate that IF they had used lower voltages, there was a definite advantage to permanent magnet motors, but... they had a fear of China restricting trade on rare-earth magnets in the future. So, by going to high voltage hairpins, they can use permanent magnets while they are available, and then switch to induction rotors if they have to.
http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=34&t=58465&p=873425
Porsche 918 Spyder hybrid (BLDC permanent magnet outrunner/giant RC scale?)
https://youtu.be/ZSiR5quGMi8?t=374
BMW i3 electric car (stator is shown immediately, rotor at 3:40, permanent magnet inrunner, see how the rotor sections float at 4:14)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x3brfAEs_RY
[youtube]x3brfAEs_RY[/youtube]
Looking for an assembly video of the GM Volt "hairpin" style motor (easy to wind?)

The smaller "Chevy Spark" motor is also a hairpin style. by using high volts, it provides good torque from lower RPMs, which apparently allows GM to use a permanent magnet rotor, or...to swap to an induction rotor with no changes to the power or the size/shape of the inrunner stator (plus no changes to any potential oil-cooling shroud). They seemed to indicate that IF they had used lower voltages, there was a definite advantage to permanent magnet motors, but... they had a fear of China restricting trade on rare-earth magnets in the future. So, by going to high voltage hairpins, they can use permanent magnets while they are available, and then switch to induction rotors if they have to.
http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=34&t=58465&p=873425