Merci! I feel that artists that never worked with cheyenne do not know this. I started out with cheyenne and it was really confusing to hear that some run their machine at 12 or 8 or 9. I thought they were talking about the first number on my cheyenne power supply. No my mentor did not explain hertz to me, just told me to use cheyenne. I understood the difference in one of your vidéos and because i worked with cheyenne it all made sense. I have a wand liner i run at 5.5 Wand packer i run at 6.4 Shader is 8.5 Flux max 4.5 give 1.0 at 6 Exo 2.5 at 8.4 My hand speed is very much the same. Works for me. Cheyenne hawk spirit was at 90 Thunder i chewed skin so bad at 90 i learned the difference between spirit and Thunder the hard way (mentor did not explain) (( good thing it was on myself and my cousin)) And again you guys made those differences clear for me. Thank you!
In my experience, the most common BLDC motor used in tattooing is a 1KV rated motor. That's 1v=1K rpm or 8v=8k rpm. For every Volt applied the motor turns an equivalent rpm. Torque is another animal that needs its own video.
More accurate way of measuring the speed. 8volts on one machine could be 100hz but on another could be 120hz so the voltage is the same but the “speed in hz” is different.
@@ThatTattooShow I'm just asking because you didn't really address it in video. From my understanding Volts is what you put into motor and it spinns at certain Hertz which more like output which as you wrote is more reliable reading specially if on different motors. I might be very wrong as well
You are right, I didn’t address that. I think the point I was trying to make is that just cause your machine runs at 5 volts it doesn’t mean it’s fast, it could be running the same as one that runs at 3 volts in regards to the speed of the motor
Herts or CPS is the only thing we should be going by. Increasing Voltage does increase speed on rotaries but RPM is unknown. Unless you do math. Hz needs to be standard not volts.
But you have rotary machines then star running at 2,5 volts Chris… that Guy is right. And is only 3 companies who make them going so low… but at a price.
That’s because the motor they use has a voltage range which starts at 2.5 I’ve literally checked in the motor manufacturers websites. The guy is incorrect and the fact is you can’t run a machine lower than the motors voltage range set by the manufacturer
Also just to add to this. Just because a machine starts at 2.5v does not mean it’s slower than one that starts at 4.0 or 9.0… 2.5v could still be 40 hertz, just like 9.0v is also 40 hertz other motors.
Finally someone who explains this decently 🙌
Great video Chris
Great factual information Chris.. thank you.. I learned something new today..
Merci! I feel that artists that never worked with cheyenne do not know this. I started out with cheyenne and it was really confusing to hear that some run their machine at 12 or 8 or 9. I thought they were talking about the first number on my cheyenne power supply. No my mentor did not explain hertz to me, just told me to use cheyenne. I understood the difference in one of your vidéos and because i worked with cheyenne it all made sense.
I have a wand liner i run at 5.5
Wand packer i run at 6.4
Shader is 8.5
Flux max 4.5 give 1.0 at 6
Exo 2.5 at 8.4
My hand speed is very much the same. Works for me.
Cheyenne hawk spirit was at 90
Thunder i chewed skin so bad at 90 i learned the difference between spirit and Thunder the hard way (mentor did not explain) (( good thing it was on myself and my cousin))
And again you guys made those differences clear for me. Thank you!
In my experience, the most common BLDC motor used in tattooing is a 1KV rated motor. That's 1v=1K rpm or 8v=8k rpm. For every Volt applied the motor turns an equivalent rpm. Torque is another animal that needs its own video.
#knowledge great vid Chris
So what's better Voltage or Hertz?
Hertz
@ThatTattooShow why?
More accurate way of measuring the speed.
8volts on one machine could be 100hz but on another could be 120hz so the voltage is the same but the “speed in hz” is different.
@@ThatTattooShow I'm just asking because you didn't really address it in video. From my understanding Volts is what you put into motor and it spinns at certain Hertz which more like output which as you wrote is more reliable reading specially if on different motors.
I might be very wrong as well
You are right, I didn’t address that. I think the point I was trying to make is that just cause your machine runs at 5 volts it doesn’t mean it’s fast, it could be running the same as one that runs at 3 volts in regards to the speed of the motor
Herts or CPS is the only thing we should be going by. Increasing Voltage does increase speed on rotaries but RPM is unknown. Unless you do math. Hz needs to be standard not volts.
But you have rotary machines then star running at 2,5 volts Chris… that Guy is right. And is only 3 companies who make them going so low… but at a price.
That’s because the motor they use has a voltage range which starts at 2.5 I’ve literally checked in the motor manufacturers websites. The guy is incorrect and the fact is you can’t run a machine lower than the motors voltage range set by the manufacturer
Also just to add to this.
Just because a machine starts at 2.5v does not mean it’s slower than one that starts at 4.0 or 9.0…
2.5v could still be 40 hertz, just like 9.0v is also 40 hertz other motors.