-RA- said:
yes, very much so. After about 5 minutes of spinning it was very warm to touch. I also kept seeing tiny sparks between the wire and the magnet. Its hard to make it quickly, as you have to arrange it so the rotational force is constantly pushing the wire towards the magnet, or else the wire will just disconnect as it spins. Also you have to make small indent in the battery so the wire sits there confortably and does not spin off and i found that wetting the wire a bit helped the current flow and sped it up considerably.
That's very interesting. When the wire spins fast enough to disconnect the device ceases to be a motor and becomes a generator. Momentum carries it around cutting through the magnets lines of force and apparently a rather high voltage is developed: enough to jump the gap in the form of a spark. The actual voltage depends on the density of the magnetic field lines and the speed of the rotor in cutting them, as per Faraday.
However, there is probably a form of switching surge as well: when the current flows in the wires as normal the magnetic field around the wires is going to be distorting the magnetic field of the magnet. When contact is broken and the magnetic field around the wire collapses the magnet's field can "relax" back to normal, and as it does so, its lines of force cut through the wire, generating current at a fairly high voltage. (This is also straighforward Faraday: a changing magnetic field will induce current in a conductor.)
In practice, as soon as the lines of force start generating current in the wire its magnetic field comes back, distorts the magnet's field again so its lines are no longer cutting the wire and current is no longer generated, whereupon the magnet's field re-relaxes, generating current, and so on, over and over, such that you get a high frequency oscillation. As Rutherford figured out, these sparks, as in the discharge of a capacitor, are actually alternating current phenomena. (He discovered that discharging a leyden jar through a magnetised needle would weaken its magnetism demonstrating that the discharge was a decaying AC current.)
The heating of the battery may simply be due to the lack of resistance in the circuit: it is discharging a lot of current very quickly. Or it may be due to the fact the battery is being subjected to the high voltage of the spark. Or both. An easy way to test the former possibility is to just connect the terminals of a battery with a short length of the same gage wire and see if it starts to heat up. I am sure the wire will get hot, but don't know about the battery.
Your idea of wetting the wire prevents contact from being broken and the motor works much better since the current isn't always being interrupted. You might also try a thicker gage of wire that won't bend so easily. The guy in the video seems to have put some kind of aluminum cap over his magnet with a groove around the sides for his contacts to ride in. I'm sure that helps constrain the position of the wire eliminating the need to put a dimple in the negative terminal as you did.