View Single Post
  #13   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 19-02-2011, 23:47
kevin.li.rit's Avatar
kevin.li.rit kevin.li.rit is offline
Imaginary Friend
AKA: Kevin Li
FRC #0596 (SciClones)
Team Role: Student
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Rookie Year: 2001
Location: Hopkinton, Massachusetts
Posts: 936
kevin.li.rit has a reputation beyond reputekevin.li.rit has a reputation beyond reputekevin.li.rit has a reputation beyond reputekevin.li.rit has a reputation beyond reputekevin.li.rit has a reputation beyond reputekevin.li.rit has a reputation beyond reputekevin.li.rit has a reputation beyond reputekevin.li.rit has a reputation beyond reputekevin.li.rit has a reputation beyond reputekevin.li.rit has a reputation beyond reputekevin.li.rit has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via Yahoo to kevin.li.rit
Re: Window Motor question

Quote:
Originally Posted by ipburbank View Post
Sorry for the poor wording of that question the first time, What I mean to ask is: a second motor wouldn't decrease the duty cycle, and I wonder if the difference in load would be enough to decrease the heat generated. From previous discussion the 7-8 amps isn't an enormous load indication, therefore even half that with the long duty cycles might not make much of a difference?
The heat generated in total would be cut down as you are running the motors more efficiently. With two motors ( and based on your current measurements) you'd be running a at close to 80% efficiency, with a single motor you'd be running closer to 60% efficiency. You'd also have twice the surface area to dissipate less than half the excess heat.

I don't have too much experience running these window motors to know under what loads the PTC likes to trip.

Edit: I've been reading the RPMs as %efficiency... so my figures for efficiency are off...
__________________
Kevin Li

596 - Sciclones
1405 - Finney Falcons
2262 - Holliston Panthers

Last edited by kevin.li.rit : 20-02-2011 at 00:08.