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Author Topic: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2  (Read 314669 times)

marksmachines

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #90 on: April 27, 2006, 10:14:26 PM »
Hi Cesarc

The shape should be steel or iron

I hope you can see the atacment If not I will try something else tomorrow.

Good luck

Maran

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #91 on: April 27, 2006, 10:53:41 PM »
did somebody try to draw on femm program a circle iron core outside the stator?????
I will appreciate if somebody post the graphics.

cesarc

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #92 on: April 28, 2006, 01:33:47 PM »
Thanks Mark,
I saw tha attachment. It is very clear.
Thank you.

ld294

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #93 on: April 28, 2006, 03:32:29 PM »


Hi! my name is Luis
I m working we Mr Torbay in Argentina, some bady saw the information in the chart, and they gave te home page, I sign, and readdy to speak we any one, but muy Inglish is not very good. but I  tried the gave alls information you need.

Magnetizer

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #94 on: April 28, 2006, 04:47:42 PM »


Hi! my name is Luis
I m working we Mr Torbay in Argentina, some bady saw the information in the chart, and they gave te home page, I sign, and readdy to speak we any one, but muy Inglish is not very good. but I  tried the gave alls information you need.


Hi Luis,

Is that right, you are working together with Mr. Torbay ?
We are trying to replicate the 'transgenerador magnetico' but have had no success yet. Could you send us some detail information on the setup (drawings, magnet layout, etc.) ?

Thanks in advance for all the information you have to share with the world ...

Magnetizer

joe

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #95 on: April 28, 2006, 06:03:05 PM »
Yes Luis, it would be nice from you if you could share to this forum your knowledge of Mr Torbays' Motor.

Thank You!

Joe

cesarc

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #96 on: April 28, 2006, 07:41:41 PM »
Hola Luis:
Supongo que pod?s escribir es espa?ol y alguno de nosotros puede traducirlo al ingl?s.
?Cu?l es tu relaci?n con Torbay y en que estado se encuentra el transgenerador magn?tico en este momento?
Gracias.

Hi Luis:
I guess you can post in spanish and any of us can translate it to english.
What is the relation between you and Torbay and in wath state is the magnetic transgenerator in this moment.
Thanks.

hartiberlin

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #97 on: April 28, 2006, 08:18:38 PM »
Luis Querido. Puede usted por favor pedir a Sr. Torbay el v?deo? Puede usted por favor preguntarle, si ?l puede poner el v?deo de AVI otra vez en l?nea? Deseamos ver un v?deo del motor corriente.
Muchas gracias. Recuerdos, Stefan Hartmann.

P.S:This is an online translation via babelfish.altavista.com

Jdo300

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #98 on: April 29, 2006, 12:55:49 AM »
Hola Luis,

Si tienes una copia del dibujos mec?nicos, me gustar?a convertirlos a dibujos de 3D AutoCAD para que gente con capacidad en potencia de CNC puede construir prototipos.

?Salud!
Jason O


Hi Luis,

If you happen to have any printed blueprints of the design, I would be happy to convert them to 3D AutoCAD parts so that people with CNC capability can machine the pieces.

God Bless,
Jason O
« Last Edit: April 29, 2006, 01:25:46 AM by Jdo300 »

Duranza

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #99 on: April 29, 2006, 02:09:58 AM »
Wow we might have found the missing link. I hope Luis posts soon.

Luis tenga confianza y por favor escribanos sobre el projecto en tema. Muchas gracias!

silverdragonrs

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #100 on: April 29, 2006, 08:38:21 AM »
many wire models (3d modeling) were shown on the argentina site..... if we could get a copy of those I think all problems would be solved! good to hear from somebody who knows mr torbay. :)

handysg

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #101 on: April 29, 2006, 08:46:44 PM »
Hi All,
New to this forum, been reading up on this thread, very, very exciting.
Some questions if you guys don't mind. Where's the balancing for the rotor? What about the wear & tear of the mechanical system? This thing is going what? 100 rpm? And the lifting of the stator, approx. 1.5 times per second? How long can this motor go on running if it works?
Just my 2 cents.

Jdo300

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #102 on: April 30, 2006, 12:43:59 AM »
Hi All,
New to this forum, been reading up on this thread, very, very exciting.
Some questions if you guys don't mind. Where's the balancing for the rotor? What about the wear & tear of the mechanical system? This thing is going what? 100 rpm? And the lifting of the stator, approx. 1.5 times per second? How long can this motor go on running if it works?
Just my 2 cents.

Good questions. All we can say for sure is that according to the news articles, Torbay has one that has been running for over a year now so we are at least guarnteed it will work for that long. As for the balencing of the rotor. That's as simple as adding a counterweight. However, it shouln't be a problem since the magnetic fields from the stators are keeping it centered for the most part. Also, since the rotor is tall, putting a long shaft through it will keep it from wobbling too much as it is moving; and since the motor runs at low RPMs, this shouldn't be a big issue.

God Bless,
Jason O

lancaIV

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #103 on: April 30, 2006, 01:20:10 AM »
To give an "published"example about demagnetiztion:
The S.E.A.R.L.-generator,demagnetization and magnets change after 60.000 KWH work.
How many Kg did he used ?
We should not see demagnetization as physical problem,it is only a cost-factor !
(With the hope that China will not abuse their Neodym-quasi-monopol(-e))
Telling about 1 year permanent-work,with permanent 2,5 KW output ?
Probably Mr."Luis" or Mr.Torbay directly will give the answer !

Sincerely
            de Lanca
« Last Edit: April 30, 2006, 01:50:16 AM by lancaIV »

madmaxx

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Re: Magnet Motor from Argentina, part2
« Reply #104 on: April 30, 2006, 03:49:46 AM »
Still working on my model. I found that the stator magents should be spaced far enough apart so as not to interact. The stator magnets need to be the same thickness as the rotor. If your using .5" thick block then the rotor should be .5", now you only have to lift .5" to get the rotation. I don't think the rotor should be 180 degrees. More like 120 so you only have a N/S pole plus little more on each end to get close to next stator lift position. I used a doughnut magnet and cut it down with a tile saw. When I lift one stator it rotates to the next and leaves the previous in the up position. Now when you lift next stator the rotor moves again and pulls down the previous stator. The cycle then repeats. It seems it takes 3 stator positions for this interaction to work. There are 2 pulling so there should be enough force to lift the one that releases the lock and creates rotation. I'll be building the lifters soon. Perhaps I'll get a working model.

Could it be this simple?