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#1
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What d'ya think, veedubber?
Unit is from a Harley-Davidson. 9.5 lbs installed (including all mounting hardware). $288.17 (including tax) 38 Amps No belts or pulleys. http://ernest.isa-geek.org/Delta/Pic...torFitting.jpg http://ernest.isa-geek.org/Delta/Pic...ratorMount.jpg http://ernest.isa-geek.org/Delta/Pic...atorMount2.jpg http://ernest.isa-geek.org/Delta/Pic...atorMount3.jpg http://ernest.isa-geek.org/Delta/Pic...atorMount4.jpg http://ernest.isa-geek.org/Delta/Pic...atorMount5.jpg http://ernest.isa-geek.org/Delta/Pic...atorMount6.jpg http://ernest.isa-geek.org/Delta/Pic...atorMount7.jpg http://ernest.isa-geek.org/Delta/Pic...torMounted.jpg http://ernest.isa-geek.org/Delta/Pic...orMounted2.jpg http://ernest.isa-geek.org/Delta/Pic...ratorParts.jpg http://ernest.isa-geek.org/Delta/Pic...eratorTest.jpg |
#2
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On Aug 2, 3:38 pm, Ernest Christley wrote:
What d'ya think, veedubber? Unit is from a Harley-Davidson. 9.5 lbs installed (including all mounting hardware). $288.17 (including tax) 38 Amps No belts or pulleys. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Seems like the way to go, doesn't it? The first one I did like this was about 1970, using the dynamo from a Honda 250cc motorcycle. At prop speeds it managed to produce enough power for my ignition and an 8-track tape :-) The later versions (as you are using) uses rare earth magnets... the early jobbies used Alnico and weighed a ton. But the rare earth magnets don't deal with heat very well and since the unit is only about 50% effective, for every amps-worth of electrical output you've got to deal with an amps-worth of heat. Usually, at prop speeds that isn't a problem but spin it any faster and you can see some serious side-effects due to overheating. I mention this because of the 'submerged' location on your installation. I think I can see a couple of oil pipes here that tells me the excess heat is going to appear in your oil. You should know that the rare-earth magnets tend to spall or flake when overheated. I've also had problems keeping the suckers aligned, which is why I use the rim of the central hole and five fasteners to try and keep things on the same plane. They get balanced as a complete assembly, by the way. We appear to be using the same stator & rotor but a different reg/rec module. (I'm using the one sold by Great Plains) When properly set-up I've got about 1mm of axial clearance between the poles of the stator and the magnets. At prop speeds (ie, 2800 to 3000 rpm) it doesn't take much skew to cause contact. Since my installations are not submerged they're pretty easy to inspect and the bright line caused by the momentary contact is always accompanied by a spew of abrasive residue, ground off of the magnets. Being magnetic -- and external to the engine -- the residue isn't much of a hazard but it isn't something I'd care to have in my oil. Since I run mine at prop-speeds the output is rather modest, only 8A. to 10A, even through the momentary peak output is rated at something like 40A. But with an electronic ignition system you only need about 5A to power the ignition system and maintain the charge on a small battery. Truth is, I didn't want a system capable of producing the maximum amperage since it would only get turned into heat at the rectifier/regulator module. (Indeed, I would have been perfectly happy with the old style 10 ampere unit and wish Steve still sold them.) If you'll look closely at the photos in my blog you can see how I solved the problem :-) -R.S.Hoover |
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On Aug 2, 11:17 pm, Ernest Christley wrote:
I need to verify, but I'm fairly certain that the reg/rec I'm using is a switching type. It turns off the line when the power isn't needed. Saving the generator from producing heat in both the rotor/stator and generator. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dear Ernest, I'm afraid that only addresses the power OUTPUT, not generation. So long as the magnetic field is present and is being cut by the winding of the coil, a voltage WILL appear across the coil, as will some residual heating effects. The regulator can isolate this from the battery but that only addresses the output-side of the equation. That's a guess of course -- we're using different components. But in a permanent-magnet type dynamo the Field is always 'on' so to speak -- there is no 'control' as is found in the typical generator-type dynamo since there is no Field winding. In either case, I think your method of installation calls for a bit more head-work. -R.S.Hoover |
#5
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![]() wrote in message ... On Aug 2, 11:17 pm, Ernest Christley wrote: I need to verify, but I'm fairly certain that the reg/rec I'm using is a switching type. It turns off the line when the power isn't needed. Saving the generator from producing heat in both the rotor/stator and generator. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dear Ernest, I'm afraid that only addresses the power OUTPUT, not generation. So long as the magnetic field is present and is being cut by the winding of the coil, a voltage WILL appear across the coil, as will some residual heating effects. The regulator can isolate this from the battery but that only addresses the output-side of the equation. That's a guess of course -- we're using different components. But in a permanent-magnet type dynamo the Field is always 'on' so to speak -- there is no 'control' as is found in the typical generator-type dynamo since there is no Field winding. In either case, I think your method of installation calls for a bit more head-work. -R.S.Hoover Fun, goofy thread. Actually, there is something called an electrically augmented turbocharger. It's a turbocharger with an electric motor on the shaft connecting the turbine and compressor ends. The idea is for the electric motor to help the engine exhaust spin up the turbocharger reducing turbo lag. It's also used on 2-stroke piston ported diesels to provide enough manifold pressure to start them and idle. However, once the engine is running and the exhaust pressure takes over from the electric motor, there's no reason why the motor can't swich to being a dynamo/generator. There's plenty of excess energy in the exhaust of an engine producing 60 - 75% power to generate ample electric power. I once pitched this idea to the DeltaHawk folks as a way to dump the heavy roots blower and alternator and get a quick response turbocharger. Of course, if your engine doesn't need a turbocharger in the first place, just replace the compressor end with a high RPM alternator. Fun thinking about this stuff. Bill D |
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This may seem like a stupid idea, but good ideas sometimes come in stupid
clothes. In a normal air-cooled tractor engine, cold air comes in the front, passes over and through the cylinders, and is exhausted through the plenum chamber called the bottom of the cowl. Rapidly moving air, that after it does it cooling job, is no longer of any use. Remember back in dem halcyon days of the 50s and 60s we sometimes mounted inefficient little generators on small pylons on the bottom of the airframe and called them wind driven generators (the electrical equivalent of the side-mounted venturi tube)? I'm just wondering if anybody has used either this scrap dump air to run a wind driven generator, or whether any one of a number of ways of generating electricity from heat has been attempted to convert waste exhaust gas into excited little electrons? SOrt of a turbogenerator, if you will. Jim -- "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." --Aristotle wrote in message ... On Aug 2, 3:38 pm, Ernest Christley wrote: What d'ya think, veedubber? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Seems like the way to go, doesn't it? |
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"RST Engineering" wrote in message ...
This may seem like a stupid idea, but good ideas sometimes come in stupid clothes. In a normal air-cooled tractor engine, cold air comes in the front, passes over and through the cylinders, and is exhausted through the plenum chamber called the bottom of the cowl. Rapidly moving air, that after it does it cooling job, is no longer of any use. Remember back in dem halcyon days of the 50s and 60s we sometimes mounted inefficient little generators on small pylons on the bottom of the airframe and called them wind driven generators (the electrical equivalent of the side-mounted venturi tube)? I'm just wondering if anybody has used either this scrap dump air to run a wind driven generator, or whether any one of a number of ways of generating electricity from heat has been attempted to convert waste exhaust gas into excited little electrons? SOrt of a turbogenerator, if you will. Jim -- Centrifugal blower run backwards...gotta watch out not to dam things up too much... And...you could reverse drive it to pull air through the engine for cooling on the ground? |
#9
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On Aug 3, 9:03 am, "Blueskies" wrote:
And...you could reverse drive it to pull air through the engine for cooling on the ground? -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hahahahahaah,,, :-) Don't be so silly :-) You're about two orders of magnitude out. Minimum cool-down is going to take a pressure differential of about 3"H2O. With either suck-through or blow-through, for something like an O-200 that's going to take about 3hp... about 2100 watts. You'd need a couple of hundred pounds of batteries and a blower to match. -R.S.Hoover |
#10
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![]() "RST Engineering" wrote I'm just wondering if anybody has used either this scrap dump air to run a wind driven generator, or whether any one of a number of ways of generating electricity from heat has been attempted to convert waste exhaust gas into excited little electrons? SOrt of a turbogenerator, if you will. Only problem I can see is that cooling runs on pressure differential, (as you know) between the intake, and outlet. Dam up the damn outlet, and it could have a drastic effect on the amount of cooling air passing over the engine. People go to drastic measures to get that outlet pressure low, like adding lips, ect, so I would not want to go the other way with restricting the flow. I would think that you would have to dam it up pretty good to get the 3-5 HP you would probably need for a generator. On the other hand, if you put a turbocharger hot section on the pipes, and used that to drive a generator....? Noah. Too big of a gear box would be needed to turn the high RPM of the turbo down to prop RPM's for the generator. -- Jim in NC |
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