What is the Wattage Calculation for a DIY Generator with Multiple Coils?

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The discussion focuses on calculating the wattage output of a DIY generator with multiple coils. The generator produces 12 volts at 2000 RPM with a coil resistance of 0.8 ohms, leading to a maximum theoretical power output of 45 watts using the formula P=V²/4R. When considering 18 similar coils, the configuration (series or parallel) significantly affects the output voltage and internal resistance, thus influencing the maximum power output. Short-circuiting the coils to measure current is discouraged, as it does not provide an accurate representation of the power delivered to a load. Ultimately, the actual performance of the generator will depend on the load connected and should be tested under various conditions for precise results.
  • #31
It all depends on how much power the source is ready to give. Your generator ousts 45W and this is more than sufficient to light a 13W bulb if you provide it with the correct rated voltage. Check if the bulb's not burnt out!
You are still turning it by hand, at 2000rpm, may be you are using a set of gears,... I don't know but you need to turn the generator so that it is able to give out the required power at the stated voltage. It can't be a mistake from the 'transformer addition' side.
 
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  • #32
PhysicoRaj said:
It all depends on how much power the source is ready to give. Your generator ousts 45W and this is more than sufficient to light a 13W bulb if you provide it with the correct rated voltage. Check if the bulb's not burnt out!
You are still turning it by hand, at 2000rpm, may be you are using a set of gears,... I don't know but you need to turn the generator so that it is able to give out the required power at the stated voltage. It can't be a mistake from the 'transformer addition' side.

In case of battery 12 V battery, can you say what's maximum o/p it can give? 12V Battery can give give o/p of 1000W or may be more, but that would be for short duration. If you draw only 10W, it will last longer.
In case of 12V Generator it cannot give more o/p like 1000W for the same load which we used for battery test, by adding inverter to it.

And yes, the bulb is not burnt. I'm using it at night time. I've gears in place, which ratio of almost 1:60.
 
  • #33
Alkemist said:
In case of battery 12 V battery, can you say what's maximum o/p it can give? 12V Battery can give give o/p of 1000W or may be more, but that would be for short duration. If you draw only 10W, it will last longer.

Batteries are not rated for power but in the amount of charge they contain. I used a 66Ah battery which is nothing but 66Ah*12V=792Wh. You are right that they can give large powers but for short duration. But in case of a generator, you are continuously supplying that power by mechanical means. A generator doesn't have stored energy does it? As long as you are putting 45 joules a second into the gen, it will give out that 45 joules in a second to the load. The transformer only steps the voltage so that the load is able to receive this power. Conservation of energy, you see.
Here's a quote by Simon:
Simon Bridge said:
... but it really depends on the power that is supplied to whatever turns the handle.
That's the point.

Theoretically, everything is right. Practically, there must be something faulty with the apparatus or procedure in your experiment, which I can't see.
 
  • #34
I understand that, but I got little confused in between because of Battery and Generator conversation we had and your Bettery/inverter experiment.

So to make sure we are on same page, I'd like conclude this fact considering we use same loads for both cases and ideal sources / no internal resistances:
Battery Case: 12V 66Ah battery can supply 12x66=792w for an hour or it can supply 1584w for half hour or 3168w for 15 min. This holds true even if we use inverter.
Generator Case: 12V 16A generator can only provide 192W of power continuously. Even if you step up or step down, or use inverter [on DC o/p] it will still deliver same wattage.

Also : Consider that a lamp of 13w needs 120V and I use my 12V generator as source for it. If 12V cannot lit the bulb, then it won't lit, even if I step up my generator to 120V.
 
  • #35
Alkemist said:
If 12V cannot lit the bulb, then it won't lit, even if I step up my generator to 120V.

No, that's not true. Power consumed is a function of both the voltage and the load resistance. P=V2/R

What I am telling you is the generator supplies the same wattage regardless of the voltage, but not that the load will consume the same wattage if you change the voltage across the load. The generator supplies that much power which the load 'asks'. And the load 'asks' more if you apply more volts. The rating on the bulb means the same. 13W@120V means - "This bulb 'asks' for 13W of power from the source if applied with a voltage of 120V."

As for your bulb not lighting, I have thought of that. You measured the output volt of the gen with a multimeter? Was that the rms value? Or the peak? If 12v was peak value, then the stepped up 120v is also peak and not rms. And the bulb is rated for 120V rms! 120V peak means you get a voltage of 85V rms! It is simply like applying 85v dc to the bulb. Wait, I think I have calculated the resistance of the bulb in a previous post...
Here it is - 1.1k for 13W
Ok..
P=V2/R
P=85*85/1100
P=6.5W
Maybe that's why it's not lighting.

Therefore, make sure what type of voltage you have measured. If it's the peak, then you will have to change the o/p of gen from 12v to 17v. That will give you 120Vrms on the bulb and it should be doing:thumbs:
 
  • #36
PhysicoRaj said:
Here it is - 1.1k for 13W
Ok..
P=V2/R
P=85*85/1100
P=6.5W
Maybe that's why it's not lighting.

Therefore, make sure what type of voltage you have measured. If it's the peak, then you will have to change the o/p of gen from 12v to 17v. That will give you 120Vrms on the bulb and it should be doing:thumbs:


I still have doubt :devil:
Let me present the case in different way. Let's consider that My single phase 12V o/p from generator is stepped up to 120V. Take a motor whose internal resistance is 1 ohm. If I apply this P = V*V/R here, it would be 14400. If you take other feasible resistance values... may be 0.3 or 3ohm, you will get P in the range of 48000 to 4800W.

What's wrong with me here? :bugeye:
 
  • #37
Alkemist said:
If I apply this P = V*V/R here,

That V in V*V/R is Vrms not 120V
 
  • #38
PhysicoRaj said:
That V in V*V/R is Vrms not 120V

Even in that case if I take it as 85*85/1=7225 W?

Are you sure about this
 
  • #39
Yes. That's right. But if you connect an underrated motor to over voltage of 120V or 85Vrms, that 7225 watts is going to fry your motor..
And... you have taken the resistance of motor as one ohm??
 
  • #40
PhysicoRaj said:
Yes. That's right. But if you connect an underrated motor to over voltage of 120V or 85Vrms, that 7225 watts is going to fry your motor..
And... you have taken the resistance of motor as one ohm??

There are motors in the market, whose resistance values are in the range of 0.02 - 1 ohm. Remember the earlier motor link I shared? It's resistance is below 0.05 Ohm.
 
  • #41
Alkemist said:
There are motors in the market, whose resistance values are in the range of 0.02 - 1 ohm. Remember the earlier motor link I shared? It's resistance is below 0.05 Ohm.

Then taking into account of your gen's int resistance as 0.8Ω the voltage across the load (whatever) will not be 120V.
 
  • #42
PhysicoRaj said:
Yes. That's right. But if you connect an underrated motor to over voltage of 120V or 85Vrms, that 7225 watts is going to fry your motor..
And... you have taken the resistance of motor as one ohm??

Either your Professor is Wrong or I'm Right o:)
 
  • #43
PhysicoRaj said:
Then taking into account of your gen's int resistance as 0.8Ω the voltage across the load (whatever) will not be 120V.

We stepped it up to 120V, right? And as we put Transformer in between, it is decoupled from the generator too.
 
  • #44
The resistance as 'felt' by the generator will be different. Because it is electrically isolated from the load.
The apparent resistance felt by the generator is:
RL=actualRL*[(Np/Ns)2]
So it is = 1.1k*0.1*0.1=11Ω
so V across this is 12*11/(11+0.8)
=11.186V
This gets stepped up. Hence the o/p at transformer is 11.186*10= 111volts. Not 120 volts! See there is lot of maths behind a simple generator directly connected as compared to through a transformer!
 
  • #45
PhysicoRaj said:
The resistance as 'felt' by the generator will be different. Because it is electrically isolated from the load.
The apparent resistance felt by the generator is:
RL=actualRL*[(Np/Ns)2]
So it is = 1.1k*0.1*0.1=11Ω
so V across this is 12*11/(11+0.8)
=11.186V
This gets stepped up. Hence the o/p at transformer is 11.186*10= 111volts. Not 120 volts! See there is lot of maths behind a simple generator directly connected as compared to through a transformer!

My objection is not on the calculations. It's on the Power output in this scenario. You see we are getting Power o/p of 111*111/1 = 12321W from that 12 volt generator.

If you think you are Right on 12321 watt of o/p from 12V generator, then I think I should get admission in your school/college :biggrin:

Which one is it by the way?
 
  • #46
If you don't understand that, here it is: Since the gen has a finite internal resistance, exact 12v will not be applied at the input of the transformer. Hence obviously exact 120v cannot be expected at the output. Simple :)
 
  • #47
Wrong.
 
  • #48
PhysicoRaj said:
If you don't understand that, here it is: Since the gen has a finite internal resistance, exact 12v will not be applied at the input of the transformer. Hence obviously exact 120v cannot be expected at the output. Simple :)

Ok, let's re solve the problem. Generator has 0.6 ohm resistance. In Open circuit it gives 12V o/p. Now we connect it to transformer, whose internal resistance is same as generator. Then we step up that whatever voltage 10 times and then give it to the load of 0.05 ohm.
How does your calculation look like in this case?

For simplicity we can take 1ohm as resistance for generator as well as transformer and then for load. How does it sound in this case
 
  • #49
PhysicoRaj said:
Wrong.

Wrong For what?
 
  • #50
Wrong in my calculations
 
  • #51
111V is for that 13w bulb. Sorry i had To consider your 1Ω motor right? that will give you 1.48 volts. Implies not 12321W So it does not cross the max power rating of your gen I gave as 45W. And you r not goin to get admission in my college.:-p
 
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  • #52
PhysicoRaj said:
111V is for that 13w bulb. Sorry i had To consider your 1Ω motor right? that will give you 1.48 volts. Implies not 12321W So it does not cross the max power rating of your gen I gave as 45W. And you r not goin to get admission in my college.:-p

So that's what my point was. From 12V battery, you can draw very high power, may be 1kw, 2kw, 3kw or more. But from generator, you can't :rolleyes:

And surely, there no school in this world where I can't get admission :cool:
 
  • #53
Alkemist said:
So that's what my point was. From 12V battery, you can draw very high power, may be 1kw, 2kw, 3kw or more. But from generator, you can't

Surely it depends on the max wattage of the generator,yes.. But you told that your 45W generator cannot light a 13W bulb if simply the voltage was stepped up. I told this was wrong.

Alkemist said:
If 12V cannot lit the bulb, then it won't lit, even if I step up my generator to 120V.
Your notion that whatever be the voltage the power consumed is same - was wrong.

Have you thought of any permanent load for your generator?
 
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  • #54
Load will be some 12V or 24V rechargeable battery, which will run bulbs or small motor using inverter. Once finished this setup will be donated to one of the Farmer or I'll keep this in my backyard as show piece Wind generator, if no one takes it. But for now I'm thinking of having some fun calculations on this generator as well as check how much power human can generate.

If internal resistance = load resistance = max power transfer. Then we loose exactly half power in generator itself.

So in short circuit condition one coil generates I*I*R = 16*16*0.8 = 204.8 Watt. This is all internal power dissipation, but that's what generator can generate at the max.

If I have 18 coils short circuited independently, generator generates 204.8 * 18 = 3686.4 [I know I can't turn it by hand any more, neither wind can, this is just for calculations]. So out of this I can extract max useful power of 1843.2 watt from generator.

Now if I connect them in series I get 12*18 = 216V, and P = 3240W.

Let's connect them in Parallel. Resulting resistance is = 0.8/18 = 0.044ohm. If I calculate, 16*18 = 288 Amp, so total power = 288*288*0.044 = 3649.53W.
 
  • #55
I just want to make sure:

A generator converts one form of energy into another - in the example, mechanical energy is being converted to electrical. It does not create energy.

You cannot get more energy out of a generator than you put in - you cannot get it out at a faster rate than it goes in. You can run the generator to some sort of storage device and draw energy quite fast from that.

If the generator delivers a certain max current (for a fixed mechanical power in), for a particular load, then naively stepping up the voltage via a transformer will just reduce the max current - this is because the power input is fixed.

You could just pedal harder.

For something like a wind-driven generator, increasing the load usually slows the windmill down.
Usually the setup is such as to overpower the generator for the expected loads and then use some sort of gearing system to get a steady energy output.

The ratio of power delivered to the load to power delivered to the generator is the efficiency.
The efficiency may vary with the load - it is always less than 1, usually a lot less than 1.

A generator rated at 45W may not be able to light up a 25W bulb - it depends on how the generator was rated, how the power delivered varies with the load.

A "25W bulb" just means that for a mains rms voltage it will dissipate energy at the rate of about 25W.
At lower voltages it will dissipate less - but bulbs are not Ohmic resistors, and, anyway, below a certain voltage they would dissipate energy almost entirely outside the visible spectrum. If the goal is to run the bulb at it's rated power, then you may have to step-up the voltage by quite a lot.

The transformer itself is an extra load on the generator. It would be worth looking up the operation of a power transformer.

But the lynchpin is still how that 45W rating for the generator was arrived at.
If there was any statement about that, I missed it. Arn't we supposed to be discussing a specific home-built generator?
It may be helpful to restrict discussions to that.

Right - glad I got that off my chest.
Carry on :)
 
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  • #56
Simon Bridge said:
But the lynchpin is still how that 45W rating for the generator was arrived at.
If there was any statement about that, I missed it. Arn't we supposed to be discussing a specific home-built generator?
It may be helpful to restrict discussions to that.

Right - glad I got that off my chest.
Carry on :)

My apology Simon, if I sounded/acted off subject...

45W is the max power we can extract from this generator at given rpm. It was calculated based on internal resistance = load resistance and based on that Raj got 45W [Can we call it as rating?].

PhysicoRaj said:
Rotating this 300 turn coil at 2000 rpm generates 12v (as you have stated) so V=12v; the load you have to connect in order to draw maximum power is same as the internal resistance so R=0.8Ω; then the max wattage is
Pm=V2/4R
=(12)2/4*0.8
=45W.

What I mentioned is without putting load, in short circuit condition, power dissipated in generator is 16 Amp * 16 Amp * 0.8 Ohm = 204.8W, Which is not a useful power, but that's what is being converted as a result of mechanical energy to electrical energy.

In short whatever muscle power I'm supplying to rotate the generator is = 204.8W + energy loss in friction. Out of these 204.8W energy, only 45W max can be delivered to the load.

If I take 2 coils in series it becomes like this:
24V Open circuit voltage. 1.6 Ohm internal resistance. 15 Amp short circuit current. Which is 360W. Here we can deliver 90W to load.

If I take 2 coils in parallel it becomes like this:

12 V open source voltage. 0.4 Ohm internal resistance as coils are in parallel. 30 Amp is short circuit current. So max power which can be delivered to load is 90W.

What I'm concluding is : Input mechanical/muscle power to generator is greater than 360W. And the Max O/p a generator can deliver to load is 90W in this case, which says o/p is 4 times less than input, what a efficiency...
 
  • #57
Alkemist said:
My apology Simon, if I sounded/acted off subject...
You didn;t - I just got a bit concerned that the thread was going in circles.

45W is the max power we can extract from this generator at given rpm. It was calculated based on internal resistance = load resistance and based on that Raj got 45W [Can we call it as rating?].
You can choose any rating system you like (it's your machine) but you have to be clear about what it means.

iirc. That power was dissipated internally - the generator gets hot. Or was that the impedence-matched condition (load = internal resistance)?

What really counts is the power dissipated in the load.
The hypothetical situation concerns a load that is made of a step-up transformer and a light-bulb.

You can figure what to expect by constructing the Thevinin equivalent for the generator and then drawing out the circuit - analyse the circuit normally. (This would be )

Since you have built it already though, you can probably work out the efficiency for different loads experimentally - this would involve driving the crank from a dropped weight and tracking the voltage across the load over time. That would mean getting a recording oscilloscope - iirc: audio-frequency oscilloscope programs can be obtained that use the computer's mic input.

Access to this sort of stuff is pretty much de-rigeur for the sort of things you are attempting.

Of course, the alternative is just to try it and see - then all this discussion is moot ;)
It is a wonder you have not been experimenting - after all, what you really want to know is how it will perform with the wind blowing. Instead of working out how generators get designed, try investigating the properties of the one you built - you'll learn more.

Power generation is quite complicated - the bottom line is that any theories must be checked against real life.
 
  • #58
Alkemist said:
Load will be some 12V or 24V rechargeable battery

If it's a battery then you will have to rectify the output of the generator to DC.

Alkemist said:
Load will be some 12V or 24V rechargeable battery

You can't be ambiguous about that. A 12V output cannot charge a 24V battery to 24V.
 
  • #59
PhysicoRaj said:
If it's a battery then you will have to rectify the output of the generator to DC.



You can't be ambiguous about that. A 12V output cannot charge a 24V battery to 24V.

You are correct. As of now I'm playing with only one coil, which O/P only 12 V. But when I subsequently complete other coils, It will have more Voltage O/P. Then I can decide the series or parallel combination of coils for appropriate battery resistance.

But before adding the load, I was thinking I can test muscle power o/p by short circuiting the coils.
 
  • #60
Here is the video of my Genny.
The gap in between Coil and Magnet is more than 0.8 inch but still I can get more than 12V out of this coil. I believe this coil can give 25-30V or may be more, if the gap is reduced to minimum possible. For now I have only 3 coils ready, not attached in shown video.

Video showing output can be viewed by clickinghttps://picasaweb.google.com/116297647808736459252/Mar92014?authkey=Gv1sRgCO2oqueouPGnUw#slideshow/5988894475777428818
 

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