jim hardy said:
why would you want to do that ?
to summarize:
metastable said:
I've read that the formula is as follows (assuming wye termination):
Original Turns Per Tooth # * Original KV = New Turns Per Tooth * New KV
which can be rearranged:
(Original Turns Per Tooth # * Original KV) / New Turns Per Tooth = New KV
metastable said:
I wanted to write the kv/turns formula using only SI variables and came up with these:
A = Change Factor of KV (rpm/v)
B = Change Factor of Conductor Resistivity (ohm-meters)
C = Change Factor of Conductor Volume (meters^3)
D = Change Factor of Conductor Resistance (ohm)
A=sqrt(B/(C*D))
anorlunda said:
Why do you want to put resistivity in there at all?
jim hardy said:
so as
@anorlunda said 'why are you even considering resistance ?'
metastable said:
Conclusions
I began with wye, copper, 10 turns, 100kv, 0.06ohm, 1 unit cross section.
I switched to wye, aluminum, 7.962177132674476138125 turns, 125.5937896553806517075kv, 0.06ohm, 1.255937896553806517075 unit cross section, same winding volume.
The aluminum motor now has the same winding volume, the same resistance, and according to the "traditional" kv formula, greater KV.
metastable said:
125.5937896553806517075 new kv = (10 original turns * 100 original kv) / 7.962177132674476138125 new turns
metastable said:
Now I test the proposed formula:
A = Change Factor of KV (rpm/v)
B = Change Factor of Conductor Resistivity (ohm-meters)
C = Change Factor of Conductor Volume (meters^3)
D = Change Factor of Conductor Resistance (ohm)
A=sqrt(B/(C*D))
B=D*C*A^2
C=B/(D*A^2)
D=B/(C*A^2)
----------------
A=sqrt(B/(C*D))
A=sqrt(1.57738/(1*1))
A = 1.255937896553806517075
125.5937896553806517075 new KV = 100kv original * A
125.5937896553806517075 new KV = 100kv original * 1.255937896553806517075
metastable said:
In order to make the new wire have the same volume and resistance as the first wire,
jim hardy said:
why would you want to do that ?
I make the volume and resistance of the copper and aluminum wires the same in order to answer
@anorlunda and your (
@jim hardy ) question about why the resistivity and resistance terms are needed in the proposed formula to predict the KV changes from changes to resistance, resistivity and volume instead of using changes to "turns".
jim hardy said:
Of what formulas do you speak ?
You've not shown them,
and i do not understand
(1) this obsession with resistance
These are the formulas I speak of:
metastable said:
I wanted to write the kv/turns formula using only SI variables and came up with these:
A = Change Factor of KV (rpm/v)
B = Change Factor of Conductor Resistivity (ohm-meters)
C = Change Factor of Conductor Volume (meters^3)
D = Change Factor of Conductor Resistance (ohm)
A=sqrt(B/(C*D))
B=D*C*A^2
C=B/(D*A^2)
D=B/(C*A^2)
jim hardy said:
(2) how you propose to wind 7.962177132674476138125 turns
Good point. If we require the turns to be whole numbers, what is the closest to the original resistance we can get with aluminum wire?
metastable said:
But let's assume the original motor is wye, copper, 10 turns, 100kv, 0.06ohm, 1 unit cross section
metastable said:
copper -> aluminum (same geometry wire) gives:
copper = 1.68*10^(-8) ohm meters resistivity
aluminum = 2.65*10^(-8) ohm meters resistivity
2.65/1.68 = 1.57738x greater resistance
therefore w/:
wye, aluminum, 10 turns, 100kv gives, 1 unit cross section gives:
0.0946428ohm new resistance = 0.06ohm (original copper) * 1.57738 (change factor resistivity w/ aluminum)
giving:
wye, aluminum, 10 turns, 100kv, 0.0946428ohm, 1 cross section
sqrt(1.57738 change factor resistivity w/ aluminum) = 1.255937896553806517075
1 unit original cross section * 1.255937896553806517075 = 1.255937896553806517075 new cross section
10 turns / 1.255937896553806517075 = 7.962177132674476138125 new turns
^7.96... is not whole / integer
8 turns is the closest whole number of turns
8 new turns / 10 turns = 0.8 change factor of volume
1 / 0.8 change factor of volume = 1.25 change factor of cross section to retain the same volume
giving:
wye, aluminum, 8 turns, 1.25 cross section
0.060571392ohm = (0.0946428ohm aluminum * (8 new turns / 10 turns)) / 1.25 change factor of cross section
giving:
wye, aluminum, 8 turns, 1.25 cross section, 0.060571392ohm
125 new kv = (10 original turns * 100 original kv) / 8 new turns
giving:
wye, aluminum, 8 turns, 1.25 cross section, 0.060571392ohm, 125kv, same volume
--------------------------
Comparision
wye, copper, 10 turns, 100kv, 0.06ohm, 1 unit cross section
wye, aluminum, 8 turns, 125kv, 0.060571392ohm, 1.25 unit cross section, same volume
--------------------------
Test of proposed formula
change factor of resistance = 1.0095232 = 0.060571392ohm aluminum / 0.06ohm copper
A = Change Factor of KV (rpm/v)
B = Change Factor of Conductor Resistivity (ohm-meters)
C = Change Factor of Conductor Volume (meters^3)
D = Change Factor of Conductor Resistance (ohm)
A=sqrt(B/(C*D))
A=sqrt(1.57738/(1* 1.0095232))
A = 1.25
100kv original kv * A = new kv
100kv original kv * 1.25 = 125kv new kv
comparison:
(10 original turns * 100 original kv) / 8 new turns = 125 new kv
^both formulas give same results.
-------------------------
Conclusions
If we require the turns to be whole numbers, what is the closest to the original 0.06ohm resistance we can get with aluminum wire? What is the new KV?
0.060571392ohm = closest to the original resistance we can get with aluminum wire
125kv new kv = new kv requiring whole number turns and aluminum wire with the same volume and closest possible resistance to the original copper wire
Both the "traditional" kv formula and the proposed formula based on resistance, resistivity and volume changes predict the same outcome.
------------------------
Tom.G said:
Offhand, I see no advantage to changing to Al wire from the existing Cu. Just cut a few turns off the existing windings and you're done. Can you state a reason for trying to match the existing DC winding resistance? If so, can you use a smaller gauge Cu wire? (By the way, Al is rather difficult to solder)
Correct, I don't expect any benefit with aluminum wire though silver wire could have an advantage in terms of resistance. I wanted to use aluminum as the example because any differences between aluminum and copper would be more exaggerated than the comparison of silver and copper.
------------------------
So I want to know if it is appropriate to use the following formula to calculate the expected kv of the new winding, if silver or aluminum wire is used instead of copper?
A = Change Factor of KV (rpm/v)
B = Change Factor of Conductor Resistivity (ohm-meters)
C = Change Factor of Conductor Volume (meters^3)
D = Change Factor of Conductor Resistance (ohm)
A=sqrt(B/(C*D))