While this is an industrial type pump, it should be similar to your pump, but on a much smaller scale. I'd be surprised if your pump doesn't have a real motor in it.I've been having a really hard time finding a simple cutaway diagram of one of these style of pumps
no, but its your average everyday light dimmer purchased from home depot.Do you have any information on that light dimmer that you tried?
I'm not entirely sure what you mean by "have a real motor in it", just because it is the motor itself, it's just magnetically coupled.While this is an industrial type pump, it should be similar to your pump, but on a much smaller scale. I'd be surprised if your pump doesn't have a real motor in it.
I would guess that the magnetic field isn't rotating in these motors only because the impeller doesn't "spin" when there's no water entering the pump, it just moves back and forth rapidly.These days you also have to consider an ECM motor, already Electronically Commutated, It could also be an Out Runner version where the magnetic field rotates.
If it is such a motor this will be synchronously controlled, making it virtually impossible to control electronically.
These are used on anything from a PC fan to HVAC blower motors and washing machines.
Max.
Then what makes the impeller turn? There has to be something making the magnetic field in the sealed part turn, a normal rotating stator field like in an induction motor wouldn't do it.I'm not entirely sure what you mean by "have a real motor in it", just because it is the motor itself, it's just magnetically coupled.
That's probably the best way to describe it.I believe the rotor rotates inside the stator like a bicycle wheel inside a fender. The fender (stator) rotates a field....and the wheel (rotor, impeller) syncs with it.................without physically touching it.
But it's hard to tell without photos.

I think the motor part may just be referring to whatever mechanism drives the impeller/paddle wheel. the only thing that moves on these pumps is the impeller. If I pull that out and then plug the "motor" in nothing happens. No sounds, vibrations, movement, nothing.Well going by the instruction PDF for the Ecoplus 633 water pump, it has a motor. Page 2 under the heading of "use" it says, "The pumps have an economical, powerful and reliable motor." On page 4 it has a parts view an says part #8 is the motor housing. sunlightsupply.s3.amazonaws.com/documents/.../728300_Instructions.pd.
Correct. I is the driving force of the impeller. If you take a screwdriver and put it where the impeller goes it will be pulled in too. The impeller shaft is just a magnetic steel covered with a plastic to keep it from rusting.It is be noted that when there is no power going to the motor there is still a strong magnetic field that will pull the impeller into the center hole. So there's probably permanent magnets in there.