Posted by Michael B on November 15, 2010, 11:42 am
Not wind, not hydro, but magnets pushing everything.
Like the one in Australia?
Perhaps more details? Diagrams?
> My main drive motor, PMA battery charger, and the rest of my AC motor
> array in which I produce power, uses no belts, no chains, and do not
> touch each other in any way. Each motor does have a pulley. But it is
> not your standard setup. Each pulley is a 2 to 9 inch wheel which has
> N42-N52 magnets placed approxiametly every inch of each other. The force
> of the magnets becomes the driving force.
Posted by Curbie on November 15, 2010, 9:06 pm
On Mon, 15 Nov 2010 03:42:06 -0800 (PST), Michael B
What's powering this?
Posted by Jim Wilkins on November 15, 2010, 12:42 pm
> ...
> 1-5HP, 1-3 phase, Industrial AC motors are as good as you can get. They
> can easily be converted into high output, low RPM power generators. They
> are designed to be continuous duty. You have to bascially open them up,
> and place 2 sets of N42-N52 Neomags on the armature. If your motor has 4
> poles, you must add 2 rows of 8 magnets.
> ...
> Jim Rojas
How do you attach the magnets and rebalance the armature?
jsw
Posted by Jim Rojas on November 15, 2010, 1:10 pm
Posted by Michael B on November 16, 2010, 11:05 pm
First did not have audio, second one showed a guy
spinning a group of magnets with a 12 volt motor,
and the third has been removed because of violations
of terms of service.
So perhaps something more substantive than Youtube
presentations would be appreciated.
> array in which I produce power, uses no belts, no chains, and do not
> touch each other in any way. Each motor does have a pulley. But it is
> not your standard setup. Each pulley is a 2 to 9 inch wheel which has
> N42-N52 magnets placed approxiametly every inch of each other. The force
> of the magnets becomes the driving force.