Ahhh, I got it now! Thank youYou got the formula right, but you are using it wrong. 3000RPM / 90V = 33.3RPM/V, and it is not the same thing as 33.3V/RPM.
Ahhh, I got it now! Thank youYou got the formula right, but you are using it wrong. 3000RPM / 90V = 33.3RPM/V, and it is not the same thing as 33.3V/RPM.
What’s not mentioned in my post is I have an approximately 120lbs, 29” diameter flywheel. So the participants only have to get that moving at a reasonable speed and the momentum will make easier to keep it turning....some gearing is required.Anyone who has ever peddled a bicycle or turned a hand crank to generate power knows just how difficult it can be. As the load increases the leg and arm muscles really begin to feel it.
Ron
Actually, it won't. Whatever energy is withdrawn from the flywheel must be replaced, including all of the losses, by the people cranking it. It will allow participants to slowly build up energy over a long period of time in the flywheel and then let that energy be withdrawn at a higher rate over a shorter period of time.What’s not mentioned in my post is I have an approximately 120lbs, 29” diameter flywheel. So the participants only have to get that moving at a reasonable speed and the momentum will make easier to keep it turning....some gearing is required.
Your idea is of lighting up different elements is similar to mine.
Michael
I calculate the output at .03v/rev, so at 500rpm would be 15v.I’ll ask a different question...
I have a dc motor
Volts 90
Amps 13.3
Hp 1.5
Rpm 3000
Assuming I can get the motor turning at 500 rpms how many watts will I generate?
Thank you for you help.
I calculate the output at .03v/rev, so at 500rpm would be 15v.
What load do you want to supply Va?
Max.
My LEDs will max out around 25 amps...I believe that is what you are asking.I calculate the output at .03v/rev, so at 500rpm would be 15v.
What load do you want to supply Va?
Max.
So if these are 3 V LEDs, then you are talking about 75 W into the LEDs themselves. That's not including the inefficiency of the driving circuitry. Nor the inefficiency of the electrical conversion process. Even with 100% efficiency, you are in the realm of what most people can deliver for anything other than a very brief interval with their legs.My LEDs will max out around 25 amps...I believe that is what you are asking.![]()
That’s interesting as I was already thinking of have multiple people input their energy.Unless you have multiple people powering the device simultaneously (which could well be worth incorporating into an interactive art project), you are going to be extremely hard pressed to deliver that kind of power over any period of time.
MrS,
Interesting video, thanks
As @Coenobita is a Blacksmith, I am sure he knows much easier ways to make toast.
E
Great Video!!!!Powering LED's seems like a good goal. This seems appropriate for this thread:
Powering LED's seems like a good goal. This seems appropriate for this thread:
If it is a permanent magnet DC motor it certainly will generate. I have done exactly that with an automotive cooling fan motor/blade assembly. In a good breeze it would light a backup light bulb.hi,
The Input power is the product of the applied voltage and the current thru the motor, it will not generate.
Look thru this link for more details.
https://www.micromo.com/technical-library/dc-motor-tutorials/motor-calculations
E
Not only P.M. but shunt field wound DC motors, as DC generators have been constructed since Edison.If it is a permanent magnet DC motor it certainly will generate.
Well.. if you think of the general idea of the term Horsepower, roughly equating to the work output of a single horse, the fact that we are comparing the output of a single man to the output of an average horse, it's not surprising that even a super fit man cannot maintain that level of output for a long time. Machines are so powerful these days, our mental measure of output is really skewed.Re: the video
I must confess my surprise that even a highly trained/physically fit human is capable of neigh-on 1 horsepower (which being ≈ 746 Watts) for over a minute!... Sad that said degree of 'fitness' verges upon 'deformity', tho...
Best regards
HP
It would be interesting to see the same set up but with both a human and horse.Well.. if you think of the general idea of the term Horsepower, roughly equating to the work output of a single horse, the fact that we are comparing the output of a single man to the output of an average horse, it's not surprising that even a super fit man cannot maintain that level of output for a long time. Machines are so powerful these days, our mental measure of output is really skewed.
Indeed they have!Not only P.M. but shunt field wound DC motors, as DC generators have been constructed since Edison.
Max.
Exactly!Well.. if you think of the general idea of the term Horsepower, roughly equating to the work output of a single horse, the fact that we are comparing the output of a single man to the output of an average horse, it's not surprising that even a super fit man cannot maintain that level of output for a long time. Machines are so powerful these days, our mental measure of output is really skewed.
It would... but maybe horsing around is not allowed in this place? ...It would be interesting to see the same set up but with both a human and horse.