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turning an alternator into a motor?

Started by mobile_bob, June 29, 2013, 05:02:47 PM

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mobile_bob

ok guys

i figure someone here is connected to the RC hobby or knows someone that is

from what i gather some of those guys are converting small frame alternators into high output
motor using a electronic box known as a ESC (electronic speed control)

from what i have been able to learn the ESC produces a three phase current from the DC battery buss and it is fed to the alternators stator along with some sort of connections to the rotor field and the result being a motor powered by a battery.

they have sensor and sensorless ESC units, and from what i gather the sensorless is the way i want to go.

so where do i find such a ESC that is capable of driving maybe 120amps max, or maybe that is what they refer to as input of 120amps?  i don't know, but i want to find out more.

fwiw, my understanding of the sensorless design, the unit monitors the shift in inductance to know when to trigger a phase, otherwise the sensor design uses hall effect or optical sensors to monitor where the rotor poles are in reference to the stator poles and then knows when to fire the phase.

anybody know anything about these things? or anyone that does? or any good links? or other references?

i got a really cool project in mind if i can locate the right ESC that will do what i need done.

thanks guys

bob g

EBI-WPO

Hey Bob,

Wouldn't the tail end (DC section to PWM AC) of a three phase VFD (Inverter) Do what you need? Their DC Level is usually quite high, but hey, most anything can be worked with or around.

Terry
To have B.S. aimed at you is an insult to your intelligence......To have B.S. spread about you is an insult to your character.....Neither should be tolerated willingly.   EBI-WPO 2010

BruceM

It sounds like they are using a standard brushless DC motor ESC.  Clever to use an alternator as a cheap motor.


glort


You're not thinking to use the alt as a starter motor and then as a generator are you Bob?   ;D

That would be great  for starting stationary engines and then using them to provide power nice and cheaply.

Cornelius

goldenmotor.com have some motor controllers for Brushless DC motors, though, they're ment for permanent magnet DC motors...

BruceM

Turnigy makes a 100A brushless motor ESC for $64 sold at online RC hobby stores.  It's a sensor type, comes with external sensors. Don't know if that's enough to enough to run an auto alternator.

Goldenmotor's controllers are certainly enough to handle an alternator.


mobile_bob

Glort:

that is exactly what i have in mind!  you win the cigar!  :)

EBI-WPO:

i have tried to feed the stator three phase power and it just doesn't work as expected when i energize the rotor field, it just sits there and pulsates/growls

now when i put a reostat across the field/rotor the thing will motor, just not with much power
as it makes for a very inefficient induction motor with its solid rotor poles...

Cornelius and Bruce, i will check out the two sources and see what they have to offer.

thanks
bob g

glort

Quote from: mobile_bob on June 30, 2013, 01:14:43 PM
Glort:

that is exactly what i have in mind!  you win the cigar!  :)

Oh goody!
I hope it's one of those good, fat Cuban ones.
I was given one of those years ago and the thing lasted for hours.  Not a smoker but that was good!  ;D

Whatever you come up with, please make it an off the shelf and affordable thing Bob.
It's OK for these electronic geniuses here to do all these wonderful projects but a real bummer for those not so intelligent that want the same thing but don't have the smarts to build it.

Shipo

bob g,

FYI, this is what most of us use as a speed control in our 1/8, Tekin RX8. I just received the new 2nd generation and according to their site this poppy delivery 220 amp per phase, price is around $200.


You can contact them for any question, the tech support is really good. Sorry I can help you more, but on the ESC all we care is to have the same punch from start to finish on the race and without frying the motor. I hope these help...

http://www.teamtekin.com/rx8.html
Changfa 195/10kw
Changfa 170R/3Kw
Onan 6.0DJE-3CE
Yanmar TS-105C/Winco 5.3KW

artificer

Really nice idea for a starter on the listeroid...

Interesting thread on converting an alternator to power a 2 seat buggy.
http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=30&t=16328&sid=24adc8e3466209fd76e8f6991ed1a6d6

Michael

squarebob

GM90 6/1, 7.5 ST head, 150 Amp 24V Leece Neville, Delco 10si
Petter AA1 3.5 HP, 75 Amp 24V Leece Neville
2012 VW Sportwagen TDI, Average 39.1 MPG

glort


I'm reading the threads but getting a bit lost in all the questions and modifications.

Can anyone give me the real short version of this. From what I understand, you get an alt, take out the diodes, hook a wire to each phase and then couple that up to one of these speed controllers and off you go?

Am I missing anything?
Do the controllers need programing or adjusting?  How do they throttle/ ajust the alt speed?
Any other intricacies to making this work?

I'd like to give one of these a go but just trying to understand the complications and pitfalls before I try and realise it's over my head.

Tom Reed

If I understand correctly they are similar to a 3 phase variable speed drive used in industrial applications.
Ashwamegh 6/1 - ST5 @ just over 4000 hrs
ChangChi NM195
Witte BD Generator

Tom

artificer

I agree that the alternator becomes similar  to industrial 3 phase motors.  The main difference is the industrial motors use induction, instead of field windings on the armature.  Standard VFD (variable frequency drives) take AC, convert to DC, and then recreate the AC at the needed frequency.  Speed is controlled by the frequency.

To use the alternator as a motor, you would disconnect the diodes, connect a separate wire to each phase, and provide a field current.   The greater the slip (difference between AC frequency and motor rpm/frequency) the greater the current.  If you use one of the RC ESC, I believe they will vary the frequency to accelerate up to speed, so no large startup draw.

I think (haven't seen a manual) that the RC ESC's should have a default mode.  You don't have to tweak the settings if you don't want to.  The problem I see, however, is that you need a servo signal to control the speed.  I may be off  the wall, but since it's RC equipment...

Something I'm wondering about is how fast would a 555-110 turn using 60hz power?  If it was fast enough to start an engine, you could use a static phase converter to make 3 phase out of simple single phase from an inverter, and feed that to the alternator.  Use transformers to get the voltage down to an acceptable level...

Michael



Thob

For 60Hz, divide 7200 by the number of poles in the motor/alternator.  That will give you RPM at the theoretical, no-slip point.
2 poles ==> 3600 RPM
4 poles ==> 1800 RPM
6 poles ==> 1200 RPM
8 poles ==>  900 RPM
12 poles ==> 600 RPM

Then you have to figure out the pulley ratio to get engine RPM.

The easier way is to measure it - run the engine, measure engine and alternator RPM, and measure the frequency at the point where the stator connects to the diodes.  Many of the digital meters will measure frequency.

I was messing with an old 7.3 liter (non-turbo) Ford diesel once, and determined that the frequency of the alternator (in Hz) was almost exactly the RPM of the engine.  That made for an easy tachometer!  I don't know how the pulley ratios and # poles worked out, but it did.

Witte 98RC Gas burner - Kubota D600 w/ST7.5KW head.
I'm not afraid to take anything apart.
I am sometimes afraid I'm not going to get it back together.