Fab,
I think the "zeal" comes from a true desire to keep the rules of the universe in perspective. It is great to see experimentation, and conclusions being drawn from them.... but sometimes what we interpret is not what we are really seeing. In this case, Hugh seems to be saying the universal laws are immutable, and no amount of CAREFUL experiment will duff them.
It is too easy to make experiments that appear to prove one thing, when in fact some other force is at play. This is particularly true of wind turbine combinations. Testing two or ten different types of blade profiles and lengths on a single turbine, tell us nothing about the profiles or lengths...... it tells us about the matching only.... only ....only.
Make no mistake, what Hugh says is true, and it does not need to be divisive. What needs to be pointed out is that the single stator recipe IS the best bang for buck for axials. No-one wants to see a point reached where people follow certain recipes for the wrong reasons.
The design has lots of possibilities, and weight need not be a problem with thoughtful design..... you don't need 2 full plates for a start......
From memory, there has been no time the multiple rotor system has worked better than an equally well funded (materially wise) single rotor design neo or ferrite.....
It is fundamentally wrong to assume that the rules of the universe can be bent to accommodate practical results that seem not to fit the known laws..... there is always something that has skewed the result. In this case it will be hidden in the load matching and design.
That AWP that Hugh designed, can put out an easy 35amps all day into a 55v load. It is ferrite, 3.7m diam, uses .7mm wire, but has steel. I've seen it do that for years now (about 6 I think). It has no gearing, does not burn up, does overspeed sometimes, but holds together like no other I have seen..... no-one is copying it due to stator steel availability.
Some may copy Chris's, but skills are required. The same result can be obtained without these skills, with the same copper and magnets and bigger disks... thats useful too.
"It seems to me no design should be a dead end, there should always be constant innovation, constant experimentation".
And thats true. I have built the seeley radial from scratch almost, and that design works, but is not great, Chris and others have used the dual stator. Some triple F@P stators. ....all have their moments of triumph...... but it appears at this stage the easiest to build with the most promising results are the single axials, or the drum radial with steel. Flux has done well with motor cores and neo's, but in large part single axials are the norm for lots of reasons..... even though they make poor use of any magnet, compared to an iron design.... multiple ones are just worse in their use of materials.... but still work.
Whatever works for you ..... but at least know what is at work and why.
my 2C
........oztules
He he he.......I'm back...... and it's all Toms fault too
