BUILD YOUR OWN ELECTRIC VEHICLE MANUAL

Page 162

Chapter 6:  Electric Motors arrange commutator segments to match the number of coils so that you have the force on each of these coils acting in unison with the force on all the other coils.

DC Motors in the Real World Now it’s time you met real-world DC motors—their construction, definitions, and efficiency. Let’s start by looking at their components.

Armature

The armature is the main current-carrying part of a motor that normally rotates (brushless motors tend to blur this distinction) and produces torque via the action of current flow in its coils. It also holds the coils in place, and provides a low reluctance path to the flux. (Reluctance is defined as (H 3 1)/4 and measured in ampere-turns per lines of flux.) The armature usually consists of a shaft surrounded by laminated sheet steel pieces called the armature core. The laminations reduce eddy current losses; steel is replaced by more efficient metals in newer designs. There are grooves or slots parallel to the shaft around the outside of the core; the sides of the coils are placed into these slots. The coils (each with many turns of wire) are placed so that one side is under the north pole and the other is under the south pole; adjacent coils are placed in adjacent slots, as shown at the bottom of Figure 6-2. The end of one coil is connected to the beginning of the next coil so that the total force then becomes the sum of the forces generated on each coil.

Commutator

The commutator is the smart part of the motor that permits constant rotation by reversing the direction of current in the windings each time they reach the minimum flux point. This piece is basically a switch. It commutates the voltage from one polarity to the opposite. Since the motor rotor is spinning and has momentum, the switching process repeats itself in a pre-ordained manner. The alternating magnetic poles continue to provide the push to overcome losses (friction, windage, and heating) to reach a terminal speed. Under load, the motor behaves a bit differently, but the load causes more current to be drawn. Physically, it’s a part of the armature (typically located near one end of the shaft) that appears as a ring split into segments surrounding the shaft. These segments are insulated from one another and the shaft.

Field Poles

In the real world, electromagnets (recall your toolbox nail with a few turns of insulated copper wire wrapped around it) are customarily used instead of the permanent magnets you saw in Figure 6-1 and Figure 6-2. (Permanent magnet motors are, in fact, used, and you’ll be formally introduced to them and their advantages later in this section.) In a real motor the lines of flux are produced by an electromagnet created by winding turns of wire around its poles or pole pieces. A pole is normally built up of laminated sheet steel pieces, which reduce eddy current losses; as with armatures, steel has been replaced by more efficient metals in the newer models. The pole pieces are usually curved where they surround the armature to produce a more uniform magnetic field. The turns of copper wire around the poles are called the field windings.

139


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General Electric Drive Information Sites

3min
pages 332-333

Other Related Web Sites

27min
pages 334-357

State- and Community-Related Electric Vehicle Sites

1min
page 331

Chargers

1min
page 324

Batteries

1min
page 323

Suppliers

1min
pages 318-319

Conversion Kits

1min
page 320

Controllers

1min
page 322

Electric Utilities and Power Associations

1min
page 310

Conversion Specialists

1min
page 314

Emergency Kit

1min
page 299

Driving Your Electric Vehicle

5min
pages 296-297

Charger System

3min
pages 278-282

Improved Cooling

1min
page 289

Further Improved Cooling

1min
page 290

Paint, Polish, and Sign

1min
page 291

Junction Box

3min
page 277

Low-Voltage System

1min
pages 274-276

Fabricating Battery Mounts

1min
page 267

Mounting and Testing Your Electric Motor

1min
page 266

Purchase Other Components

1min
page 259

Checking

1min
page 251

Conversion Overview

2min
pages 252-253

Wiring It All Together

3min
pages 249-250

The Manzita Micro PFC-20

1min
page 237

Terminal Strip

1min
page 244

The Real-World Battery Charger

2min
page 236

The Ideal Battery Charger

4min
pages 233-235

Charger Overview

1min
page 230

Future Batteries: The Big Picture

6min
pages 224-227

Batteries and the RAV4 EV Experience

3min
pages 228-229

Tomorrow’s Best Battery Solution—Today

2min
page 223

Five Trojan Battery Solutions

4min
pages 219-222

Today’s Best Battery Solution

2min
page 218

Battery Construction

4min
pages 214-215

Battery Types

2min
page 213

Battery Capacity and Rating

4min
pages 207-208

The Gentle Art of Battery Recharging

2min
page 209

Electrolytes

1min
page 203

Battery Overview

1min
page 200

Today’s Best Controller Solution Zilla Controller (One of the Best DC Controller for Conversions)

5min
pages 190-192

AC Controllers

2min
page 189

Conclusion

1min
page 199

Tomorrow’s Best EV Motor Solution

1min
pages 179-180

Controller Overview

2min
page 182

An Off-the-Shelf Curtis PWM DC Motor Controller

2min
page 188

DC Motor Controller—The Lesson of the Jones Switch

4min
pages 185-187

The Advance FB1-4001

3min
pages 177-178

Polyphase AC Induction Motors

3min
pages 173-175

DC Motors in the Real World

2min
page 162

Universal DC Motors

1min
page 170

Compound DC Motors

2min
page 168

Series DC Motors

3min
pages 164-165

Why an Electric Motor?

2min
page 156

Horsepower

2min
page 157

Late-Model Used Vehicles (Late 1980s and Onward

2min
page 152

Torque Required and Available Graph

4min
pages 148-149

Buy Your EV Chassis

1min
page 150

Calculation Overview

5min
pages 143-144

Difference in Motor vs. Engine Specifications

2min
pages 137-138

Automatic vs. Manual Transmission

1min
page 140

Weight Affects Speed

1min
page 124

Going through the Gears

2min
page 139

Drivetrains

2min
page 136

Weight and Climbing

1min
page 123

Weight and Acceleration

2min
page 122

Choose the Best Chassis for Your EV

2min
page 118

The Procedure

2min
page 112

Your Batteries Make a Difference

1min
page 111

Converting Existing Vans

4min
pages 104-108

Converting Existing Vehicles

1min
pages 102-103

Buying Ready-to-Run

1min
page 99

The 1990s–2000s

14min
pages 83-89

Mid-1960s to 1990s

19min
pages 75-82

Near Future Trends For Electric Drive

3min
pages 96-97

Third Wave After 1979: EVs Enter a Black Hole

2min
page 74

After 1973: Phoenix Rising, Quickly

8min
pages 70-73

1940 to 1989

10min
pages 65-69

Timeline of Vehicle History

2min
page 55

Why Do Electric Vehicles Save the Environment?

1min
page 44

Electric Utilities Love Electric Vehicles

1min
page 50

Myth #3: Electric Vehicles Are Not Convenient

2min
page 39

What Is an Electric Vehicle?

1min
page 30

Electric Vehicles Save Money

2min
page 35

Convert That Car

5min
pages 26-29

Save the Environment and Save Some Money Too

1min
page 45

Electric Motors

1min
page 31
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