S
SPARKSS
Guest
I've tried rewinding my own Stator but things aren't going too well.
The first one failed for understandable reasons when a couple of windings chafed on the rotor, leading to an intermittent ground. But I was very careful with the second rewind and did it very neatly with only 35 turns, as opposed to the original 50 and this clears the rotor without trouble. Resistance according to my multimeter is about 1.2 ohms from any one yellow wire to any other. Resistance to ground is > 2 M ohms. Resistance from a yellow wire to the union of the three wires at the opposite end of the stator windings is about 1.0 ohms. Resistance with just touching probes together is about 0.7 ohms. The multimeter looks to be exactly the same as that used by Nerobro with a different colour scheme but all the same switch positions and ranges.
I would therefore correct the real resistances to the following:
Yellow wire to yellow wire: 0.5 Ohm
Yellow wire to union at end of stator 0.3 Ohm
Yellow wire to solder joint at start of stator ~ 0.1 Ohm
Basically this all seems to make sense. The total resistance seems a little low but the magnet wire is a heavier gauge than that used in the original (I used the following).
The output in AC volts from one yellow terminal to another is about 1 V at 4000 rpm and changes a little with RPM. But this is never going to charge my battery. What could I be doing wrong?
Could the insulation of the magnet wire be failing and allowing each coil to short out? Could I have damaged the insulation in winding?
Could something else be wrong that I haven't thought of?
BTW: I have checked the rotor. This seems to show alternating north and south poles facing inwards all the way round the rotor. Also, when I put the LHS cover on with the stator attached, it is pulled in strongly by the magnetic attraction. So, I don't think there's anything wrong with the rotor.
Thanks
Ian
Howdy Ian. Your resistance readings look ok. Don't get too hung up on whether a winding "measures" a couple of hundred mohm one way or the other. Your reading showing >2Mohm to ground is more important and indicates, in all likelyhood that you're not chaffed badly either (as the likelyhood of a path to core...ground is most great). Even with many turns shorted, a short to ground and perhaps only one phase roughly intact, you'd have more than 1v AC between 2 line-line connections so this is a puzzler. You have MORE THAN ENOUGH wire wound to satisfy the output (I never wind that much). My first thought was that you might have measured using a DC meter........this will show erroneously because the source is AC (of course).
If that's not the case........and you've wound 18 poles with the 3 phases symetrically interspaced, then consider whether you have EACH POLE WOUND IN THE SAME DIRECTION - this is important........if, for example you found that it seemed to fit better to wind one one way and when you moved to the next, the other, then you'll set up a situation where the individual cycles are equal and opposite - bad juju......poor/no output.