Miles said:If the spirals were wound in opposite directions?
I need a coffee![]()
Yes! The coffee has woken me upliveforphysics said:Miles said:If the spirals were wound in opposite directions?
I need a coffee![]()
Gotta wind in opposite directions![]()
hehe i do it all the time,I didn't quite edit in time
My OPINION is :if we are going to get to that level of complexity we may as well make a true wheel motor & put a tire on it.
I guess the shape is less critical when you have a core. Rhomboid or Elliptical would give better packing, though?Thud said:Q: with a core in the coil, is there any more efficent EM shape than a true circle? given we are working with disc magnets?
Yes - like the wedge magnets, with the outside edge curved to the centre radius.Thud said:I assume the trapizoidial would be max fill regarding cored units.
Jonathan in Hiram said:Looking at this picture of the Etek motor it's clear that the magnets are separated to some degree
Jonathan in Hiram said:Something around 50% to 100% of the magnet thickness perhaps?
Thud said:I assume the trapizoidial would be max fill regarding cored units.
spinningmagnets said:One axial flux motor site I read recently had adjustable air-gap. The closest air-gap (between rotor magnets and stator) provided the highest torque, but didn't specify max airgap benefits. Perhaps less cogging for iron-cored coils, or less stator heat during partial load? I can't image a DIY AF-motor with air-gap adjustability on-the-fly, but it may be handy on the bench-mule to have the rotor standoffs be threaded for several different fixed air-gaps performance assessments.
I don't understand English language very well so this did not become very clear to me. Do you mean that if we, for example, have a one-stator-two-rotor yokeless axial machine (like ISIS), the stator shouldn't be formed of radially placed stacked iron strips ? The Lynch motor has such tooth in the rotor between the copper strips and the motor is known to have good efficiency.rhitee05 said:In a "normal" motor (i.e. radial flux), the stator core is made of a bunch of thin disks, insulated and stacked together. As the magnets spin around the stator, they see the narrow side of the laminations. The dimension that matters for eddy currents is one that is perpendicular to both the motion of the magnets and the magnetic field. On a more technical level, the EMF that causes eddy currents is defined by the cross product of velocity and magnetic flux, i.e. v x B. The right-hand rule applies here. If we're looking into a motor from the side, if the rotor is moving right-to-left and we assume the flux is flowing away from us, the EMF direction would be downward, parallel to the shaft. The stator laminations need to be thin and insulated in this dimension.
For an axial-flux motor, the eddy current-causing EMF ends up being in the radial direction (toward or away from the shaft). So, to minimize this, a laminated rotor has to be thin in the radial direction. The stators I've read about so far mostly seem to use spiral-would strips, like a clock spring.