ilconformista said:
jim hardy thanks. I get that about power, but the exact thing I don't get is this: How is it possible to have negative torque and positive speed? Because it seems to me that both speed and torque must have the same sign as the "sign" the rotation.
As SimonB said,
You have to look carefully at the description to see where the "torque" mentioned comes from.
What is providing the "twist"(torque) ?
Have you ever started a lawnmower or outboard motor?
You must supply significant torque to spin it,
but once the engine is started it produces plenty of torque.
Viewed from the top my lawnmower rotates clockwise
and i must supply clockwise torque to get it started.
Once it has started i could apply counterclockwise torque to stop it, or to extract power from its shaft.
Note reversal of torque.. Perhaps confusion stems from this fine point about action-reaction pairs. They act on different objects.
So when you swap from motor to generator keep in mind who's doing the twisting and who's feeling that twist.
To start the mower i apply clockwise torque from the top, and the motor's inertia produces equal counterclockwise torque.
When mowing with it the motor produces clockwise torque and grass applies equal counterclockwise torque from the bottom.
Observe torque felt by mower engine - clockwise to put power in, counterclockwise to take power out.These guys express it more succinctly :
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/newt.html
Newton's third law: All forces in the universe occur in equal but oppositely directed pairs. There are no isolated forces; for every external force that acts on an object there is a force of equal magnitude but opposite direction which acts back on the object which exerted that external force. In the case of internal forces, a force on one part of a system will be countered by a reaction force on another part of the system so that an isolated system cannot by any means exert a net force on the system as a whole. A system cannot "bootstrap" itself into motion with purely internal forces - to achieve a net force and an acceleration, it must interact with an object external to itself.