Author Topic: Question for Peter (dinges)  (Read 1058 times)

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Warrior

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Question for Peter (dinges)
« on: March 18, 2008, 01:51:06 PM »
Dear Peter,


I am trying to completely understand your decogging tutorial for my next motor conversion.


I've read & re-read it many times, but the part that I still can't comprehend is where you use an "imaginary magnet" positioned directly above an imaginary extension of a stator tooth.


By looking at the drawings, you are positioning magnet 1, somewhere down the line of the stator instead of flush where the stator begins. Then the following magnets are placed at an angle, this angle being determined by the center line of the imaginary magnet & magnet 1.


My question is why not position the first & last magnets skewed by one stator slot and flush with the stator? The remaining magnets would be skewed somewhere in between these 2.


I'm sure this has a perfectly comprehensible explanation but it escapes my mind at the moment.


By the way, great work with FEM!!!

« Last Edit: March 18, 2008, 01:51:06 PM by (unknown) »
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dinges

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Re: Question for Peter (dinges)
« Reply #1 on: March 18, 2008, 10:02:29 AM »
Hello,


The decogging tutorial basically grew after after these ( http://www.fieldlines.com/story/2006/6/23/94016/5550  and http://www.fieldlines.com/story/2006/6/23/185558/084) discussions about 2 years ago where I tried to express my thoughts with only limited succes. I had a lot of trouble expressing myself correctly in a way that people understood so I decided to make the effort once and for all, write it down properly in a small document and be done with it. So, if you say you don't understand what I mean, I'm at my wits end because I don't think I could explain any better than it was written in there :)


But I'll give it a go...


Firstly, I'm not sure I know what you mean by 'mounting flush' so will ignore that part of your question.


As far as the imaginary magnet goes... Let's do a little thought experiment.


Zubbly's (simple) rule states that, on a row of magnets, the first magnet should sit under one stator tooth and the last magnet sit again under a stator tooth, but the next tooth.


Follow me ?


Now, let's imagine a rotor with just one pole. On that pole there are two magnets (on one skewed row). Magnet A sits exactly under one tooth (in the image below, imagine it sits under tooth 3), magnet B sits exactly under the neighbour tooth 2.


Do you see how this would cog terribly ?


So, apparently, the simple rule goes wrong, especially in cases where there are only very few magnets per row (2 or 3). The error becomes progressively smaller with more magnets per row and is hardly an issue in practice for those cases. However, if you use the 'simple' rule (simple not being a pejorative description, btw), you will go wrong in the case of only 2 or 3 magnets per row and it will cog.


In our previous example for it not to cog, one magnet would have to sit exactly under a stator tooth, while the next magnet should be exactly under the slot, i.e. half way -between- two stator teeth:





If you understand this part, you'll see how adding the extra 3rd imaginary magnet and siting that (like the real first magnet) under a stator tooth, will serve as an aid for laying out the rotor and determining the correct skew angle.


Let me know if this was clear or not.


Regards,


Peter.

« Last Edit: March 18, 2008, 10:02:29 AM by dinges »
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Warrior

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Re: Question for Peter (dinges)
« Reply #2 on: March 18, 2008, 12:04:44 PM »
Peter,


I understand it perfectly now ;).


Thanks for the explanation mate.


Best Regards,

« Last Edit: March 18, 2008, 12:04:44 PM by Warrior »
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Bobbyb

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Re: Question for Peter (dinges)
« Reply #3 on: March 18, 2008, 03:05:37 PM »
Good explanation never got it 100% my self but now I do :D.
« Last Edit: March 18, 2008, 03:05:37 PM by Bobbyb »

Spdlmt150

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Re: Question for Peter (dinges)
« Reply #4 on: March 19, 2008, 02:04:19 PM »

Until I actually did a large motor conversion (& got it right) I didn't grasp the concepts for decogging entirely. After laying out my magnets a number of times, it finally clicked that if I didn't skew to one imaginary magnet past my layout, I would end up with both ends centered on a stator tooth. Any 2 rows of magnets in the same position (centered on a stator tooth) = cogging.

I now have a 3 horse 3 phase baldour with 84 magnets in it which can be flicked by hand with no cog whatsoever, and turns smooth as silk. Now if the weather would clear up so I can make it do something productive.....

« Last Edit: March 19, 2008, 02:04:19 PM by Spdlmt150 »