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I have a Bosch 36 V lithium-ion hammer drill motor with batteries
and charger. What sort of propeller would be appropriate to stick onto the shaft of that? Would a powered paraglider propeller be too big? I just want to get a rough idea of how much air that motor can push. Any experienced/educated guesses would be appreciated. Thanks. |
#2
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![]() "John Doe" wrote in message ... I have a Bosch 36 V lithium-ion hammer drill motor with batteries and charger. What sort of propeller would be appropriate to stick onto the shaft of that? Would a powered paraglider propeller be too big? I just want to get a rough idea of how much air that motor can push. Any experienced/educated guesses would be appreciated. You need to know some more things to be able to guess. Need to know how many RPMs it turns. Need to know how much amps it pulls at what HP level. You can make a dynamometer by putting the motor on a stand that has a lever on it that will lift some weight a certain number of degrees, which will allow you to measure torque. Put a dummy prop on it that will put a reasonable load on it. Lacking that info, or a motor number, NFI. -- Jim in NC |
#3
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On 7/24/2010 12:28 AM, John Doe wrote:
I have a Bosch 36 V lithium-ion hammer drill motor with batteries and charger. What sort of propeller would be appropriate to stick onto the shaft of that? Would a powered paraglider propeller be too big? I just want to get a rough idea of how much air that motor can push. Any experienced/educated guesses would be appreciated. Thanks. You have spelled out the motor, but there are two pieces of information that would be really useful. 1) Power - expressed as input watts or HP 2) Shaft speed. 3) If you really wanted to spoil us for information, a graph showing shaft horse power versus shaft speed would do the job. Then, getting realistic: propeller pitch is conditioned on the useful range of air speeds expected: more airspeed = more pitch angle. Brian W |
#4
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![]() "John Doe" wrote in message ... I have a Bosch 36 V lithium-ion hammer drill motor with batteries and charger. What sort of propeller would be appropriate to stick onto the shaft of that? Would a powered paraglider propeller be too big? I just want to get a rough idea of how much air that motor can push. Any experienced/educated guesses would be appreciated. Thanks. These guys are experts in R/C electrics. http://www.commonsenserc.com/ It would be interesting to see what they come up with. -- A man is known by the company he keeps- Unknown Anyolmouse |
#5
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![]() "John Doe" wrote in message ... I have a Bosch 36 V lithium-ion hammer drill motor with batteries and charger. What sort of propeller would be appropriate to stick onto the shaft of that? Would a powered paraglider propeller be too big? I just want to get a rough idea of how much air that motor can push. Any experienced/educated guesses would be appreciated. After I looked at your question again, I see there is one answer I can give you. A powered parachute prop is made for around 30 some HP and up,. probably. Your drill motor is less than one HP. So no, a powered parachute propeller would be about 36 times too big. On top of that, that drill motor is probably designed to turn many more RPM's that a PP motor, so that would make it even more mismatched. You need to find some articles to read on model airplane electric motors, something that talks about the numbers a motor is rated for. I don't remember what those numbers are named, since I don't do electric... You can get two motors that put out the same HP, and draw the same number of watts, but one is designed to turn 3500 RPM's, while the other is designed to turn 12,000 RPM's. The slow one could have a regular two bladed prop mounted directly on the motor. The one that turns 12,000 would be designed to turn a ducted fan. (imitation fighter turbo-jet engine) Yet, they still put out the same power. The ducted engine would be only good at low amounts of thrust, but allow the jet to go really fast, while the prop plane would be able to take off in a shorter distance and climb steeply, but would cruise at much slower speeds. There is a lot to read online to help understand these subjects, if you look a little bit. It sounds like you would be interested. Look in places that talk about remote control airplanes, because that is what even the man carrying experimental airplanes are borrowing knowledge from, on the subject of electric flight. It is just at larger scales. -- Jim in NC |
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"Morgans" jsmorgan charterJUNK.net wrote:
"John Doe" jdoe usenetlove.invalid wrote in message I have a Bosch 36 V lithium-ion hammer drill motor with batteries and charger. What sort of propeller would be appropriate to stick onto the shaft of that? Would a powered paraglider propeller be too big? I just want to get a rough idea of how much air that motor can push. Any experienced/educated guesses would be appreciated. .... You can get two motors that put out the same HP, and draw the same number of watts, but one is designed to turn 3500 RPM's, while the other is designed to turn 12,000 RPM's. The slow one could have a regular two bladed prop mounted directly on the motor. The one that turns 12,000 would be designed to turn a ducted fan. (imitation fighter turbo-jet engine) Yet, they still put out the same power. The ducted engine would be only good at low amounts of thrust, but allow the jet to go really fast, while the prop plane would be able to take off in a shorter distance and climb steeply, but would cruise at much slower speeds. I will consider that when simulation flying. There is a lot to read online to help understand these subjects, if you look a little bit. It sounds like you would be interested. Look in places that talk about remote control airplanes, because that is what even the man carrying experimental airplanes are borrowing knowledge from, on the subject of electric flight. It is just at larger scales. Flight of the Phoenix (2004) ![]() I tried researching the printed numbers on the motor, but got nothing. Does the forward push on an ordinary electric motor cause abnormal wear on the bearings? Or maybe that is countered/supported by the magnetic part of the motor? |
#7
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On 07/28/2010 10:53 AM, John Doe wrote:
"Morgans"jsmorgan charterJUNK.net wrote: "John Doe"jdoe usenetlove.invalid wrote in message I have a Bosch 36 V lithium-ion hammer drill motor with batteries and charger. What sort of propeller would be appropriate to stick onto the shaft of that? Would a powered paraglider propeller be too big? I just want to get a rough idea of how much air that motor can push. Any experienced/educated guesses would be appreciated. ... You can get two motors that put out the same HP, and draw the same number of watts, but one is designed to turn 3500 RPM's, while the other is designed to turn 12,000 RPM's. The slow one could have a regular two bladed prop mounted directly on the motor. The one that turns 12,000 would be designed to turn a ducted fan. (imitation fighter turbo-jet engine) Yet, they still put out the same power. The ducted engine would be only good at low amounts of thrust, but allow the jet to go really fast, while the prop plane would be able to take off in a shorter distance and climb steeply, but would cruise at much slower speeds. I will consider that when simulation flying. There is a lot to read online to help understand these subjects, if you look a little bit. It sounds like you would be interested. Look in places that talk about remote control airplanes, because that is what even the man carrying experimental airplanes are borrowing knowledge from, on the subject of electric flight. It is just at larger scales. Flight of the Phoenix (2004) ![]() I tried researching the printed numbers on the motor, but got nothing. Those numbers are DeWalt part, inventory, date code, or (not very likely) serial numbers. DeWalt would consider the motor specifications to be proprietary information, so you'll not get your hands on it! Even if the motor isn't made by DeWalt it'll still be custom made _for_ DeWalt, and the motor manufacturer would be contractually obliged not to divulge details. So you're kind of on your own there. Does the forward push on an ordinary electric motor cause abnormal wear on the bearings? Or maybe that is countered/supported by the magnetic part of the motor? It is _not_ supported by the magnetics. It may, indeed, cause objectionable wear -- that depends on whether the motor bearings can absorb the thrust of the prop (assuming you prop it directly). For all but outrunner motors, you'd want a gear box anyway. Any non-planetary gear box (or belt drive) will put a side load on the motor shaft, but its much more likely that the motor is designed for that. -- Tim Wescott Wescott Design Services http://www.wescottdesign.com Do you need to implement control loops in software? "Applied Control Theory for Embedded Systems" was written for you. See details at http://www.wescottdesign.com/actfes/actfes.html |
#8
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![]() Does the forward push on an ordinary electric motor cause abnormal wear on the bearings? Or maybe that is countered/supported by the magnetic part of the motor? Very good point. The bearings do take all of the load, called thrust, and it depends on the type of bearing whether it can stand the end load. Most likely that motor would not do well. It would be best to use a geared adapter to turn the prop, and that will remove the thrust load from the motor. Check model supply places for a suitable gearbox. I seriously doubt that you are going to get more than 8 pounds of thrust out of that motor, even with the ideal gearbox and prop. Probably not going to do well to move a person on skates. -- Jim in NC |
#9
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On 07/28/2010 12:40 PM, Morgans wrote:
Does the forward push on an ordinary electric motor cause abnormal wear on the bearings? Or maybe that is countered/supported by the magnetic part of the motor? Very good point. The bearings do take all of the load, called thrust, and it depends on the type of bearing whether it can stand the end load. Most likely that motor would not do well. It would be best to use a geared adapter to turn the prop, and that will remove the thrust load from the motor. Check model supply places for a suitable gearbox. I seriously doubt that you are going to get more than 8 pounds of thrust out of that motor, even with the ideal gearbox and prop. Probably not going to do well to move a person on skates. I hadn't realized this was part of the whole skater thing. You'll do much better to drive the skate wheels with the motor -- driving a vehicle by pushing on the air is just not efficient, it makes little sense to do so if you can drive a wheel. (For obvious reasons you can't make an airplane go by driving the wheels -- hence, propellers). -- Tim Wescott Wescott Design Services http://www.wescottdesign.com Do you need to implement control loops in software? "Applied Control Theory for Embedded Systems" was written for you. See details at http://www.wescottdesign.com/actfes/actfes.html |
#10
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Tim Wescott tim seemywebsite.com wrote:
John Doe wrote: .... Does the forward push on an ordinary electric motor cause abnormal wear on the bearings? Or maybe that is countered/supported by the magnetic part of the motor? It is _not_ supported by the magnetics. It may, indeed, cause objectionable wear -- that depends on whether the motor bearings can absorb the thrust of the prop (assuming you prop it directly). For all but outrunner motors, you'd want a gear box anyway. How about a "thrust bearing"? "Handles thrust loads, also called an axial or side load, which is a load parallel to a shaft. Facilitates smooth rotation between surfaces like other rotary bearings, but their design supports higher thrust loads. Choose from plain and ball bearing designs. " -- Any non-planetary gear box (or belt drive) will put a side load on the motor shaft, but its much more likely that the motor is designed for that. -- Tim Wescott Wescott Design Services http://www.wescottdesign.com Do you need to implement control loops in software? "Applied Control Theory for Embedded Systems" was written for you. See details at http://www.wescottdesign.com/actfes/actfes.html Path: news.astraweb.com!border2.newsrouter.astraweb.com! news-out.octanews.net!indigo.octanews.net!news.glorb.co m!postnews.google.com!news1.google.com!Xl.tags.gig anews.com!border1.nntp.dca.giganews.com!nntp.gigan ews.com!local2.nntp.dca.giganews.com!nntp.web-ster.com!news.web-ster.com.POSTED!not-for-mail NNTP-Posting-Date: Wed, 28 Jul 2010 14:09:29 -0500 Date: Wed, 28 Jul 2010 12:09:22 -0700 From: Tim Wescott tim seemywebsite.com User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.9.1.11) Gecko/20100713 Thunderbird/3.0.6 MIME-Version: 1.0 Newsgroups: rec.models.rc.air,rec.aviation.homebuilt Subject: What size propeller for a 36 V DC motor? References: 4c4a79ed$0$10434$c3e8da3 news.astraweb.com cHD3o.31959$o27.1368 newsfe08.iad 4c506eb6$0$32564$c3e8da3 news.astraweb.com In-Reply-To: 4c506eb6$0$32564$c3e8da3 news.astraweb.com Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-ID: 4JydnbyIjd_0Hc3RnZ2dnUVZ_oqdnZ2d web-ster.com Lines: 71 X-Usenet-Provider: http://www.giganews.com X-Trace: sv3-3f6ZqoviT9tUhuxFEwtz+e0eEar1X3L+uFi96q8mp/fWtGBbodHJVP8/QENBOQyVlP3qGSX4R7Haqp2!shd6REk2Bn6QAmn+u9kFW/8C6BKc6K08f2BCO44dFVpNARa+e+9MmzKxy7Kbayyd9e4ksbSa pgOK!WQ9ZDggqBsY8JWU= X-Abuse-and-DMCA-Info: Please be sure to forward a copy of ALL headers X-Abuse-and-DMCA-Info: Otherwise we will be unable to process your complaint properly X-Postfilter: 1.3.40 |
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