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Author Topic: High efficiency or overunity?  (Read 2993 times)

GerryC

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High efficiency or overunity?
« on: June 18, 2020, 09:59:20 PM »
A few years back I 3D printed an axial flux rotor and coil holders for a custom 6" pancake motor and custom controller.


The controller is 2 phase, but can be supplied with only a single rail voltage, regeneration from each phase can supply power to the 2nd phase (slowly).


It turns out to be highly efficient and I can turn this 12-pole rotor at 2000 RPM for a mere 0.43 Watts of power, 1000 RPM < 0.2 Watts.


Is this interesting to folks here? 


I never could get the Y-axis data to go negative though.


There motor running at 1000 RPM is here: https://youtu.be/mTP1tHV8UAE


Gerald

citfta

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Re: High efficiency or overunity?
« Reply #1 on: June 18, 2020, 10:06:26 PM »
Please resize your photo so it doesn't cause the page width to go way beyond the normal size.  It is almost impossible to see what you have posted.  There are several free programs you can download that will let you resize your photos.  I use Free Photo Converter or FPC.  You only have a short while to do that before your post becomes locked and then you can't edit it.


Thanks,
Carroll

GerryC

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Re: High efficiency or overunity?
« Reply #2 on: June 18, 2020, 10:43:00 PM »
Please resize your photo so it doesn't cause the page width to go way beyond the normal size.  It is almost impossible to see what you have posted.  There are several free programs you can download that will let you resize your photos.  I use Free Photo Converter or FPC.  You only have a short while to do that before your post becomes locked and then you can't edit it.


Thanks,
Carroll


I shrunk it by 50%, let me know if it needs more.


Also, Ctrl +/- keys should zoom in/out on a page and bring large pictures in to view easily.


In theory the website should be telling the browsers to shrink to a certain window size at render to avoid this issue.  Manually shrinking images on submission to accommodate small screens is the wrong approach when we include small phone screens compared to 4k displays.
[size=78%] [/size]

GerryC

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Re: High efficiency or overunity?
« Reply #3 on: June 18, 2020, 10:45:28 PM »
Some more data from a different day, similar results.



gyulasun

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Re: High efficiency or overunity?
« Reply #4 on: June 18, 2020, 10:47:49 PM »
Hi Gerald,  the max yet correct size is around 900 - 1000 pixel horizontally, unfortunately. 
If you could reduce them to that limit, it would be fine. 

Gyula

GerryC

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Re: High efficiency or overunity?
« Reply #5 on: June 18, 2020, 10:56:41 PM »
Hi Gerald,  the max yet correct size is around 900 - 1000 pixel horizontally, unfortunately. 
If you could reduce them to that limit, it would be fine. 

Gyula


Fixed to 1000 pixels width.  Thanks!

Floor

  • Guest
Re: High efficiency or overunity?
« Reply #6 on: June 18, 2020, 11:05:53 PM »
Oversize images make it necessary for the reader to side scroll in order to read all subsequent posts.                                        awkward !

Although after (enough ?) time passes the topic's page turns and the problem self remedies, except for upon the original oversize image page.

I think a low resolution JPG format, will automatically shrink the size here (at O.U.).

If you post an image, quick check it, by reading your post immediately (there is a time limit in which you can modify a post within). If the image came out oversize, click modify, clear the attachment,  change the image size as I suggested, or put it into another program (Like draw) and re-size it and try again.

You'll get your technique down.

           floor