Hi guys. I'm trying to figure out how much water force is needed to push an object roughly 19 times heavier then itself. I think water is roughly 2lbs in weight to every 32 fluid ounces.
any one think they can give me a hand?
Why don't you take a sewing machine, turn it on its side weld your sifter to a shaft and the shaft to the sewing machin. or use the sewing machine motor.
I used one for a water pump and boy did it shoot water
yes you could if you can spin it fast enough. But you notice how hard it is to spin the big ol thing? wouldn't produce to much power. you can make it power your workstation LED lights
Hey guys. I made myself a pulse circuit but my power supply failed.
Now I need a way to use a 12v magneto as a power supply.
But a magneto puts out pulses. Can I put a capacitor or a diode there to make it a steady stream of dc current?
This is for my go kart 5hp briggs. for turn signal...
24 and still don't know math. I'm Really eager to learn now! I'm sure I could pay attention, I'm sure I'm sure!
Why do you ask this? are you having some issues in math?
I want to use some motors i had laying around to do a project.
A flick of the shaft measures 5MA.
I want to rewind the motor so it produces 10ma.
do I use bigger wire, or the same size wire just more of? less of
or will I just have to