Citation for origins of the Kloss formula

AI Thread Summary
The Kloss formula, developed by Dr. Max Kloss, is commonly used in Europe and Russia for estimating the relationship between slip and motor torque in squirrel cage induction motors, yet it lacks citation in American literature. A user has identified a potential original source from a 1909 paper by Kloss published in The Electron. While early editions of Kingsley and Fitzgerald reference similar concepts, they do not credit Kloss directly. The discussion highlights the challenge of accessing Russian technical literature for those unfamiliar with the language. Overall, the search for proper citations continues, emphasizing the need for further exploration of available resources.
Dr.D
Messages
2,411
Reaction score
723
TL;DR Summary
The Kloss formula (from Dr. Max Kloss) is apparently widely used in Europe and Russia to approximate the relation between slip and motor torque in a squirrel cage induction motor, but I've never seen it in an American paper or book. Does anyone have a source citation for this?
The Kloss formula (from Dr. Max Kloss) is apparently widely used in Europe and Russia to approximate the relation between slip and motor torque in a squirrel cage induction motor, but I've never seen it in an American paper or book. Does anyone have a source citation for this?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
I think you will need to explore and follow the citation trail backwards.
Just keep broadening the search. How is your technical Russian?
An example;
http://www.ene.ttu.ee/elektriajamid/teadus/artiklid/Comp_OF_models/“The detailed analysis of Kloss formula, and variations of this, are given by Risthein (1).”
Ref 1. Risthein, E. K matematitšeskoi interpretatsij mehanitšeskoi harakteristiki asinhronnogo dvigatelja. Trudö TPI 627, Tallinn, 1986. (In Russian)
 
Thank you for this citation, @Baluncore . Unfortunately, my knowledge of Russian is nonexistent, so I will not be able to read the original of that citation.

Since posting the request, I think I have tracked down the original source, a paper by Dr. Max Kloss in The Electron, 1909.
 
Hello, firsts editions of Kingsley and Fitzgerald have a treatment about the expression, but they never mentioned Kloss´s name. It appears in section 7 - Induction machines as "Normalized Torque-Slip curves", or something like that (My two editions of K-F are in spanish).
 
Interesting comment, Pablo. Thank you. I think I lost my copy of K-F quite a few years ago, so I suppose I'll just have to let that one go. Thanks anyway.
 
Thanks, Tom G., but I think I'll pass. I found K&F to be pretty fuzzy, and after I found the work by Krause, K&F was no longer of interest to me.
 
Back
Top