tallison2010
Electrical
- Jun 9, 2010
- 2
I am trying to prove a hypothesis. I have a neodymium magnet(6Lbs of pull force) mounted to a rod, magnetized axially, south end outward(facing away from the rod mount). This "pushrod" device slides through a tube toward a fixed-mounted electomagnet(specifications to be determined). This is part of a 1/5 scale replica of a steam locomotive, and will be explained in the following theory statement.
Here is the theory:
If the pushrod (which is mounted to the wheel of the loco), is pushed into the guide tube and comes to top dead center, and this electromagnet is activated (same pole N-N, or S-S), the repulsion force will drive the "piston" to bottom dead center with enough force to cause torque, movement, and complete the rotational cycle.
Now the reason for asking. I am not extremely fluent in electronics, or electromagnetism principles, and that being said I would like to know how would I go about getting the above sequence of events to happen at a controlled RPM?
Specifically:
1)What electromagnet design will work with enough force if supplied with 12VDC/20A, using 22AWG ceramic-coated wire, confined to the physical dimensions of .625" O.D.(on the side facing the "piston" magnet) X (length TBD). This will be a rapid cycling electromagnet, and longevity is a factor.
2)Since this is going to be a continuous use type situation, heat buildup needs to be addressed.
I know this is a very bizarre question to be asking, but I have simply exhausted my limited knowledge here, and need to reach out to someone who may be able to help provide direction, and be kind enough to "blue-collar"-it for me. It's difficult to really explain what I need, but I hope someone can decipher my cryptic query.
Thanks
Here is the theory:
If the pushrod (which is mounted to the wheel of the loco), is pushed into the guide tube and comes to top dead center, and this electromagnet is activated (same pole N-N, or S-S), the repulsion force will drive the "piston" to bottom dead center with enough force to cause torque, movement, and complete the rotational cycle.
Now the reason for asking. I am not extremely fluent in electronics, or electromagnetism principles, and that being said I would like to know how would I go about getting the above sequence of events to happen at a controlled RPM?
Specifically:
1)What electromagnet design will work with enough force if supplied with 12VDC/20A, using 22AWG ceramic-coated wire, confined to the physical dimensions of .625" O.D.(on the side facing the "piston" magnet) X (length TBD). This will be a rapid cycling electromagnet, and longevity is a factor.
2)Since this is going to be a continuous use type situation, heat buildup needs to be addressed.
I know this is a very bizarre question to be asking, but I have simply exhausted my limited knowledge here, and need to reach out to someone who may be able to help provide direction, and be kind enough to "blue-collar"-it for me. It's difficult to really explain what I need, but I hope someone can decipher my cryptic query.
Thanks