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#1
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
when I posted this I knew nothing about the topic I was asking about. so here arwe the facts. I have a 115 A/C volt motor, I'm using a 12 D/C volt battery to power it. the motor is 5.7 amps, 60 hz, 1725 RPM, and it is non submersible. air cooled and isnt ment to be wet. I have a model #: xqj48517028j p and I ndont know what the p means. it also says it is thermally protected, single phase. what is single phase? and it is 60 cycle? what is that. fla= 5.8 sf= 1.0 and I have no clue what any of that means. help me out, thanks.
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#2
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
Quote:
The thermal protection most likely means that the motor will stop running if it gets to hot to prevent it from damaging itself. |
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#3
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
well what are sinusoids. and it is a wall plug type motor. so that means like even if I wanted to I couldnt convert it? and what about like wheelchair motors cause I got those. and I mean what if I used like a fan motor from a like normal around the house use post fan or whatever? would i not be able to use that with a battery.
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#4
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
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The wheel chair motors are mostly likely DC so they could be usable. Wikipedia has good info on AC and DC |
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#5
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
alright thanks. ya see I'm trying to get a powerful motor that will be hard to stop while it is receiving power. that way it will be able to power my robot through all opposition. (this robot is for like a hobby, not the competitions) and I'm thinking that I have some older wheelchair motors, and other stuff. but they arent very fast and they dont have much power. I'd probably need either a gear box or some good belts to allow diffrent speed and torgue. I kinda think I know what i'm talking about. I mean I'm just getting on a team so I dont have alot of robotics experience.
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#6
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
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#7
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
I think that you may want to talk to your local physics teacher. At the least, he can help you through some of the concepts and the math behind them.
I'll give a brief rundown of some of them. Voltage: difference in electrical potential energy between two points. Amperage or current: how fast that electrical energy can move. Power (or energy): force*distance. Work: power/time. Torque: force * distance, usually referenced with regard to rotational motion. You'll want to know this eventually. Gearboxes multiply and divide torque and rotational speed, which translates via wheels to linear power and linear speed. BTW, you may want to look up some of John V-Neun's whitepapers. I think that those will help you with some of the math that is behind the design of a drivetrain, and quite possibly help you optimize the drive for the motors you have. |
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#8
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
power and energy are not the same thing.
you have that backwards. power = work/time Quote:
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#9
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
They aren't, but for some reason known to nobody, they share the same units. Joules in the SI, BTU and its equivalents in the Eng. system. (Eng. == either English or Engineering, which for functional purposes are indistinguishable.) This makes the calculations very similar when all's said and done.
150 kJ << without my telling you, is this power or energy? 150 kN-m << That's power, but to get that I had to expand the unit. Also note that that is a torque unit as well. Energy has a number of ways to get to the kJ unit, none of them simple. Something about energy/mass * mass in a number of weird combinations makes it a little hard to translate out of handwriting. |
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#10
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
Power is measured in Watts. Energy is measured in Joules.
Work and Energy have the same units. Power and Energy do not. Think about it, to find power Power you take the derivative of work with respect to time. This will divide the units of work by time. ![]() Last edited by Ian Curtis : 03-04-2010 at 01:54. Reason: Tense correction. |
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#11
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
Well thats energy because power would be j/s.
And I don't think its torque because you're not taking the cross product |
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#12
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
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i j k 0 r 0 0 0 F Which simplifies to t=rF. There might be some trig figuring out the force perpendicular to the radius, but it's definitely a torque. ![]() |
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#13
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
Darn it, that's what I get for trying to do thermodynamics and dynamics-type unit-crunching after 11PM when I've got a headache. At least I'm not trying my homework in said subjects at this time...
As for torque, the only time it wouldn't share units with power would be if the force generating it was directed directly away from the axis of rotation, along the radius vector. Then torque goes to zero. Or if the force is acting at the axis of rotation, directed away from it (or towards it). As long as you can get a component of force that is perpendicular to the radius, at a distance greater than zero, you can get the torque. Force *distance, where the distance is specifically defined as the radius between the force and the axis of rotation. A statics course uses the same type of math to calculate the moment on a point in a beam. |
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#14
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
Quote:
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#15
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Re: Will a 1/3 horse power sump pump motor burn up at half power?
Al,
It not a simple matter of voltage in this case. A motor turns by using magnetic fields. In DC motors, the fields are generated via permanent magnets in the case and the current through the windings. In AC motors, there is generally no magnets and no brushes. The magnetic fields are generated by the AC current flowing through the motor windings and the induced currents that flow in other structures in the motor. Connecting this sump motor to a DC battery would cause it to heat up over time but it would never move. |
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