Connecting wires in a generator

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The discussion revolves around building a generator using copper coils and magnets, focusing on the wiring setup for measuring voltage. The creator has designed a system with two elliptical coils connected to form a larger coil, but faces challenges due to having four wire ends instead of two. To achieve a proper voltage reading with a voltmeter, the use of diodes is suggested to prevent backflow and maintain separate electrical paths. The user seeks clarification on connecting the coils and transitioning from three wires to two while ensuring correct functionality. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the need for careful wiring and the potential application of diodes in the generator design.
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Hey, I am fiddling around building, basically an alternator. Well, this is what i have designed so far. I made two copper coils, then squished so they were very eliptical and then connected the two flat coils together with zip ties and made a large coil. Basically, the large coil is the two small coils connected together to make a a circle (looks like a donut).

Now i take the 12v screw driver and attach two magnets and stick them in the hole of the coil and spin them. Ok so that's how it works, nothing new or unknown here.

Now, when your coil is made of just 1 wire, you connect the two ends to the two ends on the voltmeter and it will measure the voltage. However, my setup has four wire ends because the complete circle is made up of two smaller circles. Now, if i just twist the wires together and connect em to the gator clips on my voltmeter it won't read out, because it makes the coil a single complete unit and i need them to be separate if i want to keep the magnets where they are.

So, i am pretty sure i need a diode or two in order to connect the wires together and keep the electrical flow going outward instead of back through the other cable.

I have two wires and four ends. I need to connect two ends and two ends together and then connect those to the + and - ends on my voltmeter and get a reading.
thank you
 
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i was just thinking. Is it possible to use four diodes to make this work correctly?

Say, semi-circle one has wire ends a and b, and semi-circle two has wire ends c and d.

if i connect 1 diode to each wire end and then connect the diodes of a and c and b and d together would that work in combining the two avenues into one so my voltmeter will read it correctly?
 
I didn't track your posts very well, but here's basic info on winding generators:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_generator

If you could post a sketch that illustrates your questions, that would be a help.
 
h1011v4_52_4.jpg


i want to make a delta 3 phase system.

Now, i know how i need to wire everything together, but i have a few questions.

the plan is to have A B C and have 4 coils each and i would hook it up like this. A1 -> A2 then A3, A4, C1, C2, C3, C4, B2, B3, B4, B1 goes back to tie into A1. like this

fnfig-05.jpg


Now, the part where A meets into C, do i need anything special or do i just wind them together?

Also, how do i take it from having 3 wires (A, B, C) down to two, just + and -?
 
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