Difference between revisions of "Late Night Soldering: Wind"

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There are two types of servo motors: standard and continuous rotation.  Servo refers to any motor with built-in feedback of some sort. Feedback just means there is some way to know where the output shaft is.
 
There are two types of servo motors: standard and continuous rotation.  Servo refers to any motor with built-in feedback of some sort. Feedback just means there is some way to know where the output shaft is.
 
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[[File:Servo.gif] | 500 px]<br>
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[[File:Servo.gif | 500 px]]<br>
 
Standard hobby servo motors are just little DC gearhead motors with some additives
 
Standard hobby servo motors are just little DC gearhead motors with some additives
 
in them (circuitry). When you give the electronics a certain kind of pulse— basically just turning the power on and off in a specific pattern—you’re actually telling the servo motor where to point the shaft.
 
in them (circuitry). When you give the electronics a certain kind of pulse— basically just turning the power on and off in a specific pattern—you’re actually telling the servo motor where to point the shaft.
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[[File:Servoguts.jpg | 500 px]]
 
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[[File:Servoguts.jpg | 500 px]]
 
[[File:Servoguts.jpg | 500 px]]

Revision as of 15:02, 28 September 2015

Intro

Wind.gif

poetry and electricity

Before we go any further, I think it’s worth it to spend a bit of time watching a video . Since we use electricity as means to make work, its nice to have some understanding it. There are thousands of videos online, but this one is a pearl from 1945...........really different from any tutorial on youtube, see for yourself

WATCH ME
+some more great videos in case you can't get enough
1 2


Electricity seems to be both familiar and yet abstract. Its quite hard to imagine. In order imagine electricity, an analogy with water is often used.


Electricity is an essential ingredient of matter. Now ain't that poetic? So to picture it, lets zoom deep in and look at the smallest component of every element - Theatom.png

Atoms are made of even smaller particles called protons, neutrons, and electrons. The protons and neutrons are packed tightly together in the middle of the atom, and we call them the nucleus of the atom. The electrons orbit around the nucleus. Protons and electrons have electrical charges. Protons have a positive charge, and electrons have a negative charge (neutrons don't have any charge). Normally an atom has equal numbers of protons and electrons, so they cancel each other and the atom has no electrical charge.

Atom.png

Sometimes an electron escapes from its atom and runs off to join another atom.

Atoms with escaped electrons is positively charged and respectively, if electrons jump into atoms and become more, then the atom is negatively charged.


Free atoms can move freely (almost with the speed of light) trough metals, gases and vacuum. Or they can rest.

The surface that electrons are resting is said to have negative static electrical charge. If atoms are missing some electrons then it is said to be positive static electrical charge.

Current, Voltage, Power, Resistance

So anytime electrons move, we have current! Electrons can travel trough some materials but not trough others. The ones that allow electrons to flow are called Conductors (silver, gold, iron, copper..etc.) and the ones that do not really allow the free flow of electrons are called Insulators ( wood, plastic, rubber..etc.)


Electrical current can flow in either of two directions in a conductor. If it flows only in one direction, then it is called DC ( Directional Current). We will work with it and so the following information concerns DC.

Wateranalogy.png



CURRENT (I) - is the quantity of electrons passing at a given point. The unit is the AMPERE, shortly called AMP. If we compare it with water, think of it as the flow of water, the stream coming from the tap.

VOLTAGE (V or E) - is electrical pressure or force. If we now compare it with water, then Voltage is the water pressure.

The higher the pressure, the higher the flow and vice versa.

POWER (P) - is the work performed by an electrical current. It is measured in WATT. The power of a DC current is its voltage(V), times its current(I).

RESISTANCE (R) - is the conductor's (material’s) tendency to resist the current. Some materials allow more current to flow and others not. Going back to water, resistance is how much the tap is open. It is measured in OHMS (Ω).

OHM's LAW

GeorgOhm.png

Mr. Georg Simon Ohm, a German physicist and mathematician, discovered, that there is an interrelation between Voltage, Current and Resistance.
Thus given any two of them, one can find the third one.


Ohmslaw.png


V = IxR
I = V/R
R= V/I








Here is a pyramid that shows it visually.
And shows also the actuial relationship between volts, amps and ohms, which you will see way more often than V, I and R



And here another way we can see it:)

Ohm-2527s-Law-funny-Explanation.jpg

Electromagnetism

The word "electromagnetism" in physics is used to describe one of the fundamental forces of nature. This force is between subatomic particles such as protons and electrons. It helps to hold matter together.
Electromagnetism is also used to describe how a magnetic field is created by the flowing of electric current.

Electromagnet
When an electronic current flows through a wire, it generates a magnetic field. This is an important concept in electricity. The magnetic field can be increased by coiling the wire. This allows more current to flow through a smaller distance and increases the magnetic field.
Electromagnet.jpeg

Motors
One of the important applications of electromagnetism is the electric motor. An electric motor converts electrical energy into physical movement. Electric motors generate magnetic fields with electric current through a coil. The magnetic field then causes a force with a magnet that causes movement or spinning that runs the motor.
Motors.jpeg

Electromagnetic Induction

Another important application of electromagnetism is induction. Induction is when movement is used to create electricity (the opposite of using electricity to create movement). As a wire is moved through a magnetic field, current will begin to flow through it.
Induction.gif

Motors

Motors turn electrical energy into mechanical energy using coiled-up wires and magnets. When electricity flows through a wire, it creates a magnetic field around it. When you bring a permanent magnet close to that magnetic field, it will be repelled or attracted. Motors take advantage of this magnetic field by mounting coils of wire on a shaft, so when the magnet repels the coils, the shaft begins to spin. In order to keep the shaft spinning, you need to keep flipping the magnetic field so the series of repel, attract, repel, and so on continues and the shaft keeps spinning. Different motors do this in different ways.

dc


The most basic motor you’ll use is the standard DC motor. You can find them in everything from rc cars to electric toothbrushes. Motors consist basically of wire windings and permanent magnets. When the motor windings become energized, a temporary magnetic field is created that repels(and/or attracts) against permanent magnets. This force is converted into shaft rotation, which allows the motor to do work. As the shaft rotates, electric current is routed to different sets of windings, maintaining electromotive repulsion/attraction, forcing the rotor to continually turn.
Dcmotors.jpg
[dc motors]
in construction dc motors can be:
brushed
the coils are the rotating part with the shaft secured to them. Thus there is a need of brushes in order to make contact with the coils. the permanent magnets are the static part of the motor. Dcinside.jpg
brushless
is a slightly more complicated construction. the windings are stationary. we won't go into much details now.
Brushless.jpg

Windings are on the rotor (Rotating part of motor) for brush motors and on the stator (stationary part of motor) for brushless motors. DC motors usually need between 1.5V and 12V. They spin at speeds anywhere from 1,000 to 20,000 rpm or more.
DC gearhead motor
Gearhead.jpg
There are also DC gearhead motor. This is just a standard DC motor with a gearhead on it. A gearhead is just a box of gears that takes the output shaft of the standard DC motor and “gears it up” to a second output shaft that has higher torque, but turns slower. How much slower depends on the gear ratio. Here, we’re trading speed for torque.
Gearheadopen.jpg

servo


There are two types of servo motors: standard and continuous rotation. Servo refers to any motor with built-in feedback of some sort. Feedback just means there is some way to know where the output shaft is.
Servo.gif
Standard hobby servo motors are just little DC gearhead motors with some additives in them (circuitry). When you give the electronics a certain kind of pulse— basically just turning the power on and off in a specific pattern—you’re actually telling the servo motor where to point the shaft.
Servoguts.jpg
Servoguts.jpg
Instead of having just two wires you attach to a power source like the DC motors described earlier, these motors have three wires and are controlled by pulses. Standard servos have ranges between 60° and 270° (typically 180°), so they are most useful for pointing and positioning tasks.


Continuous Rotation Hobby Servos A continuous rotation servo is a modification of the standard servo motor. Instead of determining position, the pulses tell the motor how fast to go. You give up knowing the position of the servo arm here, but you gain speed control and 360° movement.

stepper


The stepper motor combines the precise positioning of standard servos and the continuous rotation of DC motors. The central shaft of a stepper has a series of magnets on it , and there are several wire coils surrounding this gear magnet on the inside of the motor housing.
Steppers work by moving in a bunch of little increments, or steps. If you step them fast enough, it looks like continuous motion. Each time one of the coils is energized, it pulls one of the teeth on the shaft toward it to complete one step. For example, a 200-step motor moves in a full 360° circle at 1.8° per step.
These motors have four to eight wires you need to use to control the pulses to make the shaft step continuously, so they’re more complicated to control than the previously described motors. They are squatter looking than the rest of the DC motor family, and have less torque than you might expect for their size and weight. However, they’re also the fastest way to integrate both speed and position control into a project.

Solenoids

Solenoids work like a motor that translates (moves in or out) instead of spinning. A solenoid consists of a housing, a plunger, and usually a spring that returns the plunger to a resting state once the power is off. There’s a coil of wire around the plunger, and when electricity flows through that coil, it either attracts or repels the plunger to give you a short, linear stroke—good for pushing buttons and making robotic instruments. An old doorbell, it most likely has a solenoid in it. When you press the button, it closes a circuit that makes a solenoid turn on, which moves the plunger and hits a chime.

Generators /dynamos, alternators/


a generator is a device that converts mechanical energy to electrical energy Electric generators convert mechanical energy into electrical energy using induction. As a coil of wire is spun between two opposite magnets, an electric current is generated.
Electromagnetic generators fall into one of two broad categories, dynamos and alternators.

  • Dynamos generate direct current, usually with voltage or current fluctuations, usually through the use of a commutator (look at the video for DC motors)
  • Alternators generate alternating current, which may be rectified by another (external or directly incorporated) system.


Caching the wind

The generator part

Normally, when you give electricity to a motor, it spins. Like we saw and discussed. The same is true in reverse: If you give a motor a spin, it acts as a generator and creates electricity.
DC motors will create direct current in one or the other direction depending on the direction the shaft is spinning ( they are dynamos) Servo motors will give us alternating current ( they are alternators). Thus is order to use it for dc applications, we have to make a circuit that rectifies the electricity and therefore transforms it into DC.
So using this simple concept we will try to harvest the wind.

the wind catching part

Wind turbines

follows