Good book on electrical machines

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Undergraduate engineering students seeking resources on electrical machines are recommended several key texts for easy understanding, including "Electrical Machinery" by Fitzgerald, Kingsley, & Umans and "Electromagnetic and Electromechanical Machines" by Leander Matsch. An older edition of the first book has been previously used successfully by forum participants. Additionally, Rockwell's literature library offers a wealth of information on VFDs, motors, and related topics, although some articles may be lengthy. Prerequisites for these subjects typically include knowledge of electromagnetic fields, circuit theory, and calculus. These resources provide a solid foundation for mastering induction and DC motors.
vroy
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hello,
i am an undergraduate student pursuing engineering.
kindly suggest me a good book on electrical machines (induction motors, dc motors ,etc) so that they can be understood very easily .
please suggest as fast as possible
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The literature library at www.Rockwell.com has numerous books on VFD's, Motors, PWM signals and AB PLC's including ladder logic instruction set. However many of the articles are too large to post here you may want to check the site out. The literature library does not need membership but the knowledge base does.
 
"Electrical Machinery", 6th edition, by Fitzgerald, Kingsley, & Umans. I had Dr. Umans in spring 2010 for a power course for the Ph.D. work. He's very good. I used this same text earlier edition in undergraduate machines course.

"Electromagnetic and Electromechanical Machines", by Leander Matsch. I used this text as a grad teaching assistant, also very good.

You cannot go wrong w/ either text. Prerequisite would be e/m fields, circuit theory, physics 1 & 2, and calculus.

Claude
 
Very basic question. Consider a 3-terminal device with terminals say A,B,C. Kirchhoff Current Law (KCL) and Kirchhoff Voltage Law (KVL) establish two relationships between the 3 currents entering the terminals and the 3 terminal's voltage pairs respectively. So we have 2 equations in 6 unknowns. To proceed further we need two more (independent) equations in order to solve the circuit the 3-terminal device is connected to (basically one treats such a device as an unbalanced two-port...
suppose you have two capacitors with a 0.1 Farad value and 12 VDC rating. label these as A and B. label the terminals of each as 1 and 2. you also have a voltmeter with a 40 volt linear range for DC. you also have a 9 volt DC power supply fed by mains. you charge each capacitor to 9 volts with terminal 1 being - (negative) and terminal 2 being + (positive). you connect the voltmeter to terminal A2 and to terminal B1. does it read any voltage? can - of one capacitor discharge + of the...

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