It would probably work better if the holes in the wooden dowel were smaller or if there were bearings holding the dowel. The wobbling interferes with the angular momentum and slows down the motor.
As you increase the supply voltage the current goes down. total watt consumption remain the same especially and when the speed maxes out. If you disconnect the power supply and turn the rotor, would you get DC output through them brush wires? And would you use dc voltmeter or dc ammeter to check it?
hey i like this video its really usefull and ill try to build motor like this to school project but i need to know.. does thickness of the wire have some efect to efficiency to the motor ?
Hi, just wondering exactly what kind of magnets you used. We have a current flowing through, but the solenoid doesn't actually repel the magnet. Any idea why? Thanks!
What is the orientation of the permanenet magnet poles? Is North facing inward on one side of the motor, and South facing inward on the opposite side of the motor? Or are "like" poles facing inward, i.e., two Norths facing inward, or two Souths? My guess is that opposite megnetic poles are facing inward towards the rotor
Ludic Science does the way you wrap the wire matter? And can i use larger stronger magnets? (THe magnets i am using are just alittle bigger and rectangular, and strong as well)
one more question please if you have time cause i'm making it as we speak..which way do the magnets face?i mean specifically the one on the right and the one on the left,round or straight face towards the wood it's stuck?
it does not matter the polarity of left or right magnets as long as they are different, for example the left may be south and the right north, or viceversa.
thanks,i made it,everything fine,but once the axis rotates it pushes both the paper clips of the positive and the negative and the motor stops moving.any suggestions?
@@dominicportolese1916 Yeah, wtf is that question xD Unless he asks if it's possible to make it reverse and produce enough energy to light up a led by speeding up the rotor. Then probably yes, imho.
Would the magnets on the sticks be repelling each other or attracting each other - despite being so far apart (e.g., Magnet 1 has a North - South orientation --> Magnet 2 - South - North orientation) - or the opposite?
Did you follow his direction on how to wind up the magnetic wires cause the direction on how you wind up the wires is critical. Did you use magnetic wires?
Great job, and you explained it, not to many people take the time. Thanks
This is brilliant! Bravo!
This is an excellent educational video. Thank you very much. We built a motor according to your model, and it worked perfectly.
Will you please tell me which battery is used??
good explanation and simple steps
Thank you so much, what any easy explanation, now I know the fundamentals cool
I learned more in this video than I have in a week in engineering
Your instructions are very easy to understand,
Well explained. Helping my son with his assignment. This vid really helps. Thanks
hello what voltage of battery did you use?
Excellent job! Did you build a version using regular magnets (e.g. the ones for the magnetic board) in place of the neodymium ones?
Wonderful explanation
It would probably work better if the holes in the wooden dowel were smaller or if there were bearings holding the dowel. The wobbling interferes with the angular momentum and slows down the motor.
As you increase the supply voltage the current goes down. total watt consumption remain the same especially and when the speed maxes out.
If you disconnect the power supply and turn the rotor, would you get DC output through them brush wires? And would you use dc voltmeter or dc ammeter to check it?
wow I like your motor nice creativity .
Very nice. Thank you.
Great Video
Great video
good video👍
simple and clear!
Very good!
Bravo man keep it up
should i scrape only one side of the copper or both ?
and what is the voltage of the battery should be ?
Very best video and very simple
awesome i love your explanation!
cool...Wonder why we can not comment on Review of Banggood's Mustool MT826 Multimeter
Very good design!
Thanks!
What could my problem be if my coils do have a magnetic field, but still attract the magnets on each side instead of repelling them?
Very nice video......thank you very much
Please tell us about the amature winding, calculation of each coil. Please do some help
Hi! For instance when 10 volts is on mechanism how much amperes consume?
Awesome
Makes me want to build one. In what polarity are the magnets facing?
magnets must attract each other
N-S
Does the way you wrap the wire around the rotor matter as well? Im having trouble getting mines to work.
Hassan yes
Yes it matters.
Do you have the equipment list?
will this work with only one 1.5 volt battery?
Whcih battery is used???
Does the materials
needs to be wood?Can I use box?
if i want to make it
but i want big
the tall of the wire is different?
Can you make a simpel generator from magnets. Your videos are very good but just want to see how you make a simple generator.
I tried making this IRL. It vibrated a little bit, but didn't spin. What did I do wrong? And yes, I sanded the rotor.
Is it necessary to use wooden sticks or not
thnx for idea
does the coil gets heat?
hey i like this video its really usefull and ill try to build motor like this to school project but i need to know.. does thickness of the wire have some efect to efficiency to the motor ?
no
Not really, unless the wire is too big that it limits the number of windings that you can make.
Hi, just wondering exactly what kind of magnets you used. We have a current flowing through, but the solenoid doesn't actually repel the magnet. Any idea why? Thanks!
J Shah not sure what you asked, but the magnets are not able to reflect wooden armatures
It does repell, that's how the motor works.
90 turns, 9v battery, size 24 AWG can the motor turn?
Can this also be a generator???
I like your videos brother,
are you an Indian ?
What is the orientation of the permanenet magnet poles? Is North facing inward on one side of the motor, and South facing inward on the opposite side of the motor?
Or are "like" poles facing inward, i.e., two Norths facing inward, or two Souths?
My guess is that opposite megnetic poles are facing inward towards the rotor
Most likely same polarity facing the motor from both magnets
hey so why are the wires on an angle when they are taped onto the rod
Would a 3D printed rotor work?
Yes!
Excellent video, can u do this with ac? What is the difference?
you need a slip ring rather than a commutator
you can't do it with AC. then the motor will probably spin and stop immediately
what is the minimum voltage for the batteries? my motor is not working
what would be the minimum voltage needed to make it spin? would 9 volts be sufficient?
he just showed it with 9V
You should build an induction motor!
I'll try
My one works but dosent turn fully how do i get it to turn fully
Ludic Science does the way you wrap the wire matter? And can i use larger stronger magnets? (THe magnets i am using are just alittle bigger and rectangular, and strong as well)
Which part is brush nd which is commutator in this?
Where do the ends of the commutator go?
What type of tape to the axis
2:53 what tape do you use to tape the two wires?
Any type of tape
How much varnish should I remove on the magnet wire? Should it only be the area where the paper clips make contact
Yes
@@ludicscience what method did you use to remove this
Can I ask, how big/dimensions of the magnets you used? Thank you God Bless
Making assumptions here, but by the context of paper clip, I'd say 2cm diameter
one more question please if you have time cause i'm making it as we speak..which way do the magnets face?i mean specifically the one on the right and the one on the left,round or straight face towards the wood it's stuck?
it does not matter the polarity of left or right magnets as long as they are different, for example the left may be south and the right north, or viceversa.
thanks,i made it,everything fine,but once the axis rotates it pushes both the paper clips of the positive and the negative and the motor stops moving.any suggestions?
swap the connections of the battery. polarity must be inverted
no this isn't the case,the polarity is alright..the problem is that the axis pushes the paperclips with the power it spins.
there is some axial force, you may need to use stiffer clips
How if i will only use 65 rotation on each side, will it still work
It will still work but the motor will be slower.
How would you strip the varnish off the magnet wire? Just sand it?
Use a box cutter knife
Yes you can sand it.
So nice
I wonder , can you do dc generator without using permanent magnet ?
you can use electromagnets, of course. there are plenty of dc motor that have electromagnets instead of permanent ones
Hi what have you used as a commutator in this motor
The magnetic wires
bro, the intro volume though
What is the strength of the magnets you have used?
dont know
Do you remove all the varnish from the sides?
Yes, he said so innthe video
Is the green tape on the axis electrical tape?
green tape is only to hold the wires
Does this type of motor operate usuing lorentz force?
EIR221?
I did the exact same thing you did, current does pass through but it doesn't spin, please help
Did you make sure each permanent magnets polarity was opposite? You can use a compass to check
Make sure that you followed his direction on how to wind up the magnetic wires.
Hermoso
can anyone tell me the requirements for this please...
"In this way"
What if i use a non magnetic wire? Will it still work??
bare copper will not work
can this generate current as well?
if you add a coil yes
what magnets and battery did u used?
what about 4 magnets.will it effect the speed
you will need another 2 coils
Usually 3 magnets and 3 coiled are used as far as I know (3 phase motor)
3:06 why are they at an angle?
How much coating should I scrape off?
1 cm
How many turns of each side and size of the wire please thank you.
50 to 100. Ideally 100 but that would be a lot more work for you.
Can this design be used to light a led light?
You would just use the battery and a bit of wire for that, no?
@@dominicportolese1916 Yeah, wtf is that question xD Unless he asks if it's possible to make it reverse and produce enough energy to light up a led by speeding up the rotor. Then probably yes, imho.
8:00 aww... you didn't pops it
I have prepared such a motor for school project but its not working..tell me why?
It depends there are lots of reasons why it may not be working
can I just ask.. what's the strength of the magnets you used?
Aniqa S it looks like he used neodymium magnets
I'm so confused 😥 it doesn't turn, and the coils are not working or becoming magnetic
Can copper wires from an old crt tv work
Yes
Great idea!what type of magnets are you using though?
Neodymiums, but it also works with ferrite magnets
Great,i'll make it and share my results with you.Keep up the awesome work,i'm loving your videos.Best regards from Greece!
Ludic Science gow how about the dimension of the magnet?
Cool #takemeshsadham
Would the magnets on the sticks be repelling each other or attracting each other - despite being so far apart (e.g., Magnet 1 has a North - South orientation --> Magnet 2 - South - North orientation) - or the opposite?
They attract
What type of battery is that?
Its 2 AA in a case
why is the angle 20 degrees important?
in order to apply magnetic field at exact position respect to magnet
I wasn't able to make it spin, maybe because I used ceramic magnets instead of rare earth ones.
I used ceramic magnets on mine and it worked
Did you follow his direction on how to wind up the magnetic wires cause the direction on how you wind up the wires is critical. Did you use magnetic wires?
Now reverse it and make power.
schitlipz I like the way you think. we must go green.
I have a system I've been working on that works. Sub to my channel to catch the upload shortly
Alguien me podría dar los materiales en español ?.
How can i make it faster??
more turns on coils, higher voltage, use bearings for the rotor.
why didn't you used Iron core??
for simplicity
will iron core be better...please tell
@@prathitmantri3950 Yes
We also made a simple DC motor along with other electromagnetism projects here! th-cam.com/video/W1hJ217-g_E/w-d-xo.html
How much voltage dose the battery loose?
6v
where are brushes?
the brushes are the clips touching the Cu wire