Quite a lot of brushless dc motors are actually permanent magnet AC synchronous motors.bobg said:Interesting question there Rob.
I know things have moved on a tad since I re-wound my own slot-car motors in nineteen-pancake, but how does a D.C. brushless motor work, does it need some electronics to pulse the polarity, and do you just swap the wires to make it reverse?
Brushless A.C. I understand (ish).
spike said:Quite a lot of brushless dc motors are actually permanent magnet AC synchronous motors.bobg said:Interesting question there Rob.
I know things have moved on a tad since I re-wound my own slot-car motors in nineteen-pancake, but how does a D.C. brushless motor work, does it need some electronics to pulse the polarity, and do you just swap the wires to make it reverse?
Brushless A.C. I understand (ish).
Normally these have a static wound field with a permanent magnet rotor driven by a DC fed
inverter.
Cheers Spike, so, much as I suspected, the invertor provides the field fluctuation, and the invertor will also change the field to make it reverse. Sounds complicated just to get rid of a couple of bits of carbon and a couple of springs. :thinking:spike said:Quite a lot of brushless dc motors are actually permanent magnet AC synchronous motors.bobg said:Interesting question there Rob.
I know things have moved on a tad since I re-wound my own slot-car motors in nineteen-pancake, but how does a D.C. brushless motor work, does it need some electronics to pulse the polarity, and do you just swap the wires to make it reverse?
Brushless A.C. I understand (ish).
Normally these have a static wound field with a permanent magnet rotor driven by a DC fed
inverter.
bobg said:[
Sounds complicated just to get rid of a couple of bits of carbon and a couple of springs. :thinking:
Rhinochugger said:bobg said:[
Sounds complicated just to get rid of a couple of bits of carbon and a couple of springs. :thinking:
Ah, but if you arrive at an answer that involves no moving parts, no friction and no wear ................................:thinking::thinking::thinking:
MRail said:Thank you all, so far!
The reason for asking relates to ESC's (Electronic Speed Controllers).
These are usually specified for brushed or brushless motors, and then by the number of turns in the armature windings.
I have a few of these, which work OK with LGB motors, but my Essel chassis (3) don't like them, and keep cutting out. The leads me to wonder about brushes.
Yes cheers Mike, I'd figured that.spike said:As Ian points out, these motors do have the advantage of no wearing parts, apart from the bearings. With todays technology it's quite easy to mount the electronics inside the motor.
I have described these motors in a simplistic way but most of them are constructed with a wound armature that is static ie it's really a stator......the rotor is really the static permanent magnet you would see in a normal model dc motor.
Basically they have turned the dc motor inside out, if you get my drift.
The windings of the armature do depart from real armature windings as they are more like single and three phase windings compared to the normally closed loop of a real armature winding.
So, if a motor has only two terminals, it's PROBABLY brushed?spike said:Quite a lot of the brushless ECS's will have a three wire output as they feed a three phase winding in the motor.
MRail said:So, if a motor has only two terminals, it's PROBABLY brushed?spike said:Quite a lot of the brushless ECS's will have a three wire output as they feed a three phase winding in the motor.
MRail said:A job for the multi-meter in the morning.
MRail said:Had a look at my own stock....
An older worm drive 6-15V type, I can see brushes through the slots.
The current bevel geared 12-24V type, has no slots so cannot tell.
Meantime, have checked resistances as suggested by Spike...
Brushed motor reads 7.2 ohms, the other reads 49.7 ohms.