Motor necessary to power a small cart

AI Thread Summary
A 6.5 kg/cm torque motor is insufficient to power a small go-cart with a total weight of 45 kg at a speed of 6 km/h. Calculations indicate that the motor produces only about 9.4 watts of power, which is significantly lower than the typical 500-1500 watts required for such carts. The torque available at a 25 cm tire diameter is reduced to approximately 1.1 kg-cm when speed adjustments are made. Users recommend considering a 500-1000 watt scooter motor, which would be more suitable for the project. Overall, a more powerful motor is necessary for adequate performance.
dracalb
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
Is a 6.5kg/cm torque motor enough to move (let.s say at 6km/h) a small go cart and a kid (total w. about 45kg)?

this is the motor: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00T48KC1Q/?tag=pfamazon01-20

PS: this is not for a homework but for a for-fun project.
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
Right offhand I'd say no. It looks like the RPM is 200, and I'm assuming the torque is 6.5 kg-cm(?). So available torque at 1:1 ratio on a 25 cm diameter tire would be about half that, or 3.25 kg-cm. To get to 6 km/hr with the same tire you would need about 3:1 speed increase, which would reduce the torque to about 1.1 kg-cm. With all the other considerations (rolling resistance, elevation increases in common roads, even flat ones) I don't see it working.

Anyone else?
 
Power = Torque * angular velocity
Power in Watts
Torque in Nm
angular velocity in rads/s

200rpm = 200*2*pi/60 = 21rads/s
6.5 kg.cm = 0.64 Nm

So that motor develops...

Power = 21 * 0.64 = 13W

Google says Kids carts typically use 500W motors and adult carts 1500W.

So way too small.
 
How did you find PF?: Via Google search Hi, I have a vessel I 3D printed to investigate single bubble rise. The vessel has a 4 mm gap separated by acrylic panels. This is essentially my viewing chamber where I can record the bubble motion. The vessel is open to atmosphere. The bubble generation mechanism is composed of a syringe pump and glass capillary tube (Internal Diameter of 0.45 mm). I connect a 1/4” air line hose from the syringe to the capillary The bubble is formed at the tip...
Thread 'Physics of Stretch: What pressure does a band apply on a cylinder?'
Scenario 1 (figure 1) A continuous loop of elastic material is stretched around two metal bars. The top bar is attached to a load cell that reads force. The lower bar can be moved downwards to stretch the elastic material. The lower bar is moved downwards until the two bars are 1190mm apart, stretching the elastic material. The bars are 5mm thick, so the total internal loop length is 1200mm (1190mm + 5mm + 5mm). At this level of stretch, the load cell reads 45N tensile force. Key numbers...
I'd like to create a thread with links to 3-D Printer resources, including printers and software package suggestions. My motivations are selfish, as I have a 3-D printed project that I'm working on, and I'd like to buy a simple printer and use low cost software to make the first prototype. There are some previous threads about 3-D printing like this: https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/are-3d-printers-easy-to-use-yet.917489/ but none that address the overall topic (unless I've missed...
Back
Top