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Author Topic: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?  (Read 2074 times)

Offline Dennis Toth

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Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« on: August 07, 2023, 11:47:24 AM »
Guys,
Looking for ways to reduce amp draw with a particular prop. Would a motor with a larger diameter can same Kv draw less amps then a small diameter can motor for the same prop/rpm?

Best,  DennisT

Offline AMV

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #1 on: August 08, 2023, 11:42:43 AM »
Dennis,

Interesting question.  Without knowing your specific info, I can say that the short answer is "no".  I can give you more details if you provide a starting point -- motor model, prop size, and voltage.

But in the interest of science, just looking at a handful of empirical data from Innov8tive Designs, I can tell you that larger motors will pull approximately the same amps when the Kv, prop, and RPM are roughly the same.

However...you will face two tradeoffs in this scenario:
1) Larger cans are heavier; some are significantly heavier than the original choice.
2) The prop that was optimal on the original motor will be too small for the larger motor.  Say goodbye to efficiency.

Cheers,  H^^
-Andrey
Spice is the variety of life.

Offline Mike Palko

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #2 on: August 10, 2023, 12:20:43 PM »
Not sure how much change you are looking for. And I can’t say how much my suggestions would reduce the amp draw. Experiment and find out.

1) Adjust the timing.

2) Use a more efficient motor.

3) Add a cell and use the same motor in a lower kv.

4) Use the same prop but twist another inch of pitch into it.

Mike

Offline TDM

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #3 on: August 11, 2023, 07:59:58 PM »
From my experience in my plane I run a 4250 1150W rated motor. I  use a 2B XOAR wood prop and use 1300mAh per flight. Flight time is 5min 30sec. Average A is in the 14.2A. I run my motor on 6S.
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Offline AMV

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #4 on: August 14, 2023, 08:03:03 AM »
From my experience in my plane I run a 4250 1150W rated motor. I  use a 2B XOAR wood prop and use 1300mAh per flight. Flight time is 5min 30sec. Average A is in the 14.2A. I run my motor on 6S.

I'm curious -- what brand is the motor? What size is the prop?
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Offline Ken Culbertson

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #5 on: August 14, 2023, 05:41:05 PM »
From my experience in my plane I run a 4250 1150W rated motor. I  use a 2B XOAR wood prop and use 1300mAh per flight. Flight time is 5min 30sec. Average A is in the 14.2A. I run my motor on 6S.
Are you downsizing the battery?  The only 4250 motors I can find are 8s turbofan motors.  If this works then a 6s 2200 would more that make up for the extra motor weight.  What is the "kv" of the motor?

Ken
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Online Brent Williams

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #6 on: August 15, 2023, 11:13:32 AM »
Are you downsizing the battery?  The only 4250 motors I can find are 8s turbofan motors.  If this works then a 6s 2200 would more that make up for the extra motor weight.  What is the "kv" of the motor?

Ken

Traian is using a Joker 4250 510kv motor.  It's a 3520 by another measurement method. 
Joker motors are likely made or relabled to their specs by DualSky. 
https://www.lindinger.at/en/AIRPLANES/ELECTRIC-POWERPLANTS/Motors/PLANET-HOBBY-JOKER-4250-8-V3-510-KV-BRUSHLESS-MOTOR/9741926
Laser-cut, "Ted Fancher Precision-Pro" Hard Point Handle Kits are available again.  PM for info.
https://stunthanger.com/smf/brent-williams'-fancher-handles-and-cl-parts/ted-fancher's-precision-pro-handle-kit-by-brent-williams-information/

Offline Igor Burger

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #7 on: August 19, 2023, 12:39:50 AM »
Guys,
Looking for ways to reduce amp draw with a particular prop. Would a motor with a larger diameter can same Kv draw less amps then a small diameter can motor for the same prop/rpm?

Best,  DennisT

You are probably not asking what yo want to know. Short answer is, that since torque constant Kt is reversed value of velocity constnat Kv, then if both motors have the same Kv, then they have also the same Kt and thus they will produce the same torque on shaft at the same current. And since the same prop at the same speed and the same RPM needs the same torque, currents IN MOTOR will be the same (aproximatelly).

However you probably wanted to know if POWER is the same, because power can be different, for example if one motor has different internal resistance. In that case there is different voltage needed to the same RPM and thus it will need feeding by higher or lower voltage and thus different POWER. It will convert to different ampere draw FROM the same BATTERY (while the motor takes still the same current). That is because ESC works with motor coil as voltage converter.

So after all the question should be if those motors differs in efficiency. And that depends on iron and copper loses. Means I0 and Ri constants, not shape or diameter. 

Offline Dennis Toth

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #8 on: August 23, 2023, 07:35:33 AM »
Something doesn't add up. If the moment arm of the magnets is longer shouldn't it require less amps for the same conditions as a shorter moment arm from a smaller can diameter, all else being the same (prop, Kv, battery, rpm setting)? If the smaller diameter could turn the same prop why would you put in a larger heavier motor?

Best,   DennisT

Offline Igor Burger

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #9 on: August 23, 2023, 09:42:22 AM »
If the moment arm of the magnets is longer shouldn't it require less amps for the same conditions as a shorter moment arm from a smaller can diameter, all else being the same (prop, Kv, battery, rpm setting)?

No. If arm is longer, magnet will move at the same RPM by higher speed, that means the back EMF will be larger, thus the same KV is at lower number of coil turns thus the same current make lower force and you are back on the same place where you started. Simply rpm and torque are defined by KV which is equal to 1/KT (rpm = effective voltage * KV and torque is effective current * KT).

If the smaller diameter could turn the same prop why would you put in a larger heavier motor?

Because beside rpm and toque there is also power and loses. Larger power creates larger loses which must be radiated, therefore more power needs larger motor. (IF ... motors run at their best efficiency)

Offline spare_parts

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #10 on: August 23, 2023, 10:41:10 AM »
The motor is a black box. It converts electrical power to mechanical. A given prop at a given RPM requires a given amount of power. The only possibility is to improve efficiency. If the motor is already ~80% efficient, how much room is there for improvement when max in this size is around 90%?

It's possible a higher quality motor can do better with better copper fill and reduced iron loss. It's possible a more expensive motor is more efficient (but not absolute). Small size variations have little impact. If you had good specs for a lot of motors, you may be able to find something a little better.

Motor designers juggle the physical variables to take advantage of very small factors to get the results they want. About the only thing we can do is rewind a motor trying to improve copper fill.
Greg

Offline John Rist

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #11 on: August 23, 2023, 11:08:18 AM »
As a matter of fact each motor has its unique set of specks.  Bigger motors usually can produce more power.  In general you need the smallest motor that will swing the prop at the required rpm.  This should give the lightest solution.  If you need noise weight a bigger motor in in order to add weight.  The bigger motor will run cooler and last longer (provided it is of the same quality).  Outside of that what is said above is all true.   D>K
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Offline TDM

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #12 on: September 04, 2023, 09:05:30 AM »
Are you downsizing the battery?  The only 4250 motors I can find are 8s turbofan motors.  If this works then a 6s 2200 would more that make up for the extra motor weight.  What is the "kv" of the motor?

Ken

Ken that is definitely a viable option if you need to make the nose lighter. In my case I need the nose weight and as an additional bonus after the flight the battery is straight in to the storage charge values.

Yesterday I finally put two full patterns on the Prowler. I run a https://www.lindinger.at/en/AIRPLANES/ELECTRIC-POWERPLANTS/Motors/PLANET-HOBBY-JOKER-3548-4-5-V3-850-KV-BRUSHLESS-MOTOR/9741922 with XOAR 10X6 on a 4S 2200mAh. After the flight, which was set to 5min 15sec, I checked the battery and it read 3.82V per cell which corresponds to 45 percent left in the pack. I used 1210mAh for the flight.

My obvious conclusion is that a larger can motor will use less energy to pull the plane through a pattern compared to a smaller one. In addition I noticed no heat build up in the motor ESC or the battery, that means no wasted energy. Perhaps here is the big difference, because calculated theoretical data doesn't include this heat generated and wasted by the system.

Two motors turning the same prop at the same RPM will have to spend the same amount of energy to accomplish that. The difference comes from the small motor heating up due to power A demand to accomplish that so it consumes the energy to spin the prop plus the heat wasted energy. This ca be observed when you have motors so hot after you land, that you cant touch them with your hand. I didn't even touch the heat in the ESC or the battery but that is also wasted energy that adds to this.
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Offline Mark wood

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #13 on: September 04, 2023, 11:15:43 AM »


Having my stuff still on the bench I went out back and did an A:B test. The only change I made between the two motors is the motor and a physically different but same APC 9 x 4.7 propeller. Using the exact same propeller wouldn't impact the results as the power difference is 10% zone, far more than minimal differences in stock propellers would make. Here's the configuration:

Motor A - Cobra 2212/16 940 kV
Motor B - Cobra 2820/12 970 kV

Battery Ovonic 4S 1550 MAH 22.9 W hr
ESC ZTW Beatless 30AMP
Timer - Hubin FM-0c

Power meter - Medusa
Tachometer  Tower

Here are the results: For this propeller, the system power consumption is basically the same. Here's the caveat. If I change the propeller to a 10 x 5, the results are different. The smaller motor power consumption goes up drastically which is why this setup has the 9 x 4.7. The 10 x 5 on the 2820 pulls around 240 watts at 10k RPM while the 2212 it goes up nearly 280 watts near it's maximum continuous power rating. The 10 x 5 would perform overall better but would overload the smaller powerplant system. Flight testing shows this to be a decent enough configuration. Slightly less optimum than the 2820 running the 10 x 5 but adequate none the less. The average sport pilot would not know the difference. I could swap to the 10 x 5 on the 2212 but the power required would mean a necessary change to a larger battery pack which would not fit in the space available.
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Offline Mark wood

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #14 on: September 04, 2023, 03:37:42 PM »
Here's some follow up tests. The first post was kind of opportunity based and I just went and grabbed data on the 9 x 4.7 prop I decided was the correct prop based on previous testing. So I went back and installed the 10 x 5 on both motors and repeated the test. Unfortunately the 2221 can't pull the 10 x 5 for very long at the first test point of 10k RPM so I backed off to 9400. There's a bunch of things going on in propellers pitch and pitch speed being one. Anyway, the results are fairly evident. When the propeller becomes larger the bigger motor is necessary to run it. When it is small enough either motor performs relatively the same. It's really no different than running an IC engine big bore v small bore. The big bore handles the loads better. I think the results speak for themselves. The 2820 pulled the 10x5 at 9400 with 236 Watts while the 2221 pulled the 10x5 at 9400 with 260 Watts. That's not insignificant.

Big motors loafing do a better job of handling the additional loads such as occur during maneuvering. So if the first smaller motor is just managing the pattern, switching to a larger motor would be a good move. If the smaller motor is more than adequate for the pattern the larger motor doesn't have any benefit. It truly depends on the off point operation. We can see that in my first post where both motors were handling the smaller load just fine, neither has a big advantage operationally. In the second case which is equivalent to off point operation the advantage goes to the larger motor.

BTW, my go to motor would generally be the 2820 for this size application because of the available power overhead. But this installation case requirements necessitated the smaller power motor.

Life is good AMA 1488
Why do we fly? We are practicing, you might say, what it means to be alive...  -Richard Bach
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Offline TDM

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #15 on: September 04, 2023, 06:50:01 PM »
Mark do us a favor and run both motors on the same way on the same plane. After that see how much do you put back in the pack. Just make sure you run the same RPM. Doing stunts is irrelevant, flying level should be sufficient. Also if you can check temperatures on the motor battery and ESC.

Thanks Traian
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Offline Mark wood

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #16 on: September 04, 2023, 08:21:17 PM »
Mark do us a favor and run both motors on the same way on the same plane. After that see how much do you put back in the pack. Just make sure you run the same RPM. Doing stunts is irrelevant, flying level should be sufficient. Also if you can check temperatures on the motor battery and ESC.

Thanks Traian

You mean, in essence, exactly what I did. I ran both motors using the same ESC, timer and battery at the same RPM with a load meter in line. In case one the propeller was a 9 x 4.7 and both configurations ran basically the same 200 watts at 10,000 RPM. In case two the 10x5 the smaller motor drew 30 more watts at the same 9400 RPM. The load (RPM) had to be reduced because the smaller motor was beyond it's efficiency rage and it consume more power for the same output power. Therefor I reduced the RPM into a zone the motor wouldn't melt and took a power comparison 236 Watts for the larger motor and 263 Watts for the smaller motor. I could have run at 10k RPM but the smaller motor was pushed up above 300 Watts which is above it 280 Watts continuous rating and I didn't want to hurt it. This fact along begins to tell a story.

I could have gone back and reduced the first test to 9400 RPM and taken readings again but the result would very similar again. Both motors would be pulling roughly the same wattage from the battery at a lower wattage than the original test point which would result in a greater power difference between case 1 and case 2. I don't see value added in taking the time to do that. I don't think that has much benefit. If it does to you, then I would suggest going out and doing the test. I personally have a solid understanding of the physics involved and I just did this testing because it was convenient timing.

Putting both on the same airplane wouldn't change the results much either. Agreed that the unloading when airborne might cause, in this case, the 10x5 prop power consumption to drop more than the 9x4.7 but what you would find is that the total power consumed over the flight for the smaller motor would still be greater which I think is the point of the first question, would switching to a larger motor help. The answer is maybe, if the smaller motor is being taxed and is running beyond it's efficiency zone then yes, otherwise no. The performance of the airplane is a different question. Yes, the airplane would work better in this case with the 10x5 but it works the way this category airplane should with either.

Here's the take away. If the motor being flown is operating within it's performance range, switching to a larger motor isn't going to make much of an impact. If on the other hand the first motor is operating in a range where it is demanded, as in being loaded above it's efficiency range, moving to a larger motor would be beneficial. Again, if on the other hand the motor is already "oversized" for its task, then switching up isn't going to make a big difference. The corollary to that is that going with the next size up in diameter isn't going to hurt and will benefit from bragging rights which, all told are very important.

End of the day the propeller requires X amount of power which comes from the motor. The battery has to provide that much power plus whatever is lost along the way. As Igor pointed out in many constants and much physics interpretation required, as the torque required increases the resulting current demand increases differently for each motor. The smaller motor increases at a higher rate than the larger motor. At the propeller that power is torque times RPM = current times voltage. Between the battery and the motor output a crap ton of power is lost to heat where the power lost is current squared times the resistance along the current path. So the little motor looses because torque is a function of current which drives the power loss by a square function of that current. The battery has to provide the power for the propeller I*V plus the power lost I^2*R. Think of the power loss as that heat gun you use to shrink moneycote. It uses 1500 ish watts. That's 6 times the power of the 10x5 propeller running at 950 RPM. 

 
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Offline Igor Burger

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #17 on: September 05, 2023, 03:47:33 AM »
I think we are mixing apples and oranges little bit.

mix #1:

Orriginal question was about difference in DIAMETER ... means motors of the same size and the same parameters differing only in diameter. My answer was valid for difference in diameter only, not the size. If we have 2 motors of the same Kv (means also Kt = 1/KV) and thus also equivalent internal resistance Ri and also no load current I0 (defining copper and iron loses) then both motors will have the same loses, efficiency, the same input power for the same prop at the same RPM indepently on motor diameter.

If we compare smaller and larger motor in its size (over all dimmensions, weight), that smaller motor will have robably higher Ri and lower Io. That will move it best efficiency load to lower load. So if we load that motor more than that, it will clearlyrun with lower efficiency with high copper loses as Mark's test cleary shows. The same will happen if we use larger motor which will be loaded too little because its iron loses will be too high. It will not reach so high temperature (see mix #3, but loses can be still high). Try to remove prop at all and let that motor run at 10 000RPM and try if it is hot or cold.

Optimal efficiency is regime where iron loses are equivalent to copper loses. Coper loses comes from resitance of winding and current (Ri*I^2), while loses in iron come from size, lamination of stator and RPM (U*I0).

mix #2:

We are mixing optimal motor for necessary load and optimal motor for optimal flight. That differs. The reason is that current technology allows wide range of good efficiency and motor goes to troubles only when pushed to extreme. It was also well documented by Mark's test. That allows overloading our motors. We simply push them to higher than optimal current because it limits their weigh (on cost of little higher loses). Carrying heavy motor to save few mAh is not optimal.

mix #3:

We are mixing temperature and energy (power). Fact that small motor runs hotter, does not mean that it has higher loses. Large motor can accumulate more heat (energy from loses) than smaller. So it will be cooler after the same load during the same time. Larger motor can also radiate the same power (of loses) at smaller temperature than small motor, simply because it has maller radiation area. Smaller motor at the same power and efficiency will heat more than smaller.

Offline Mark wood

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #18 on: September 05, 2023, 06:14:36 AM »
Nice Igor

I am not an electric motor guru, only a powerplants guy. It doesn't jell in my mind that for a constant Kv a change in diameter results in constant current for a constant power output. Intuitively that doesn't work. In fact, it boggles my brain cells. But it is. The propeller requires specific amount of power input. The work done by the propeller over the flight is that power times the duration of the flight. That doesn't change for a given configuration. For a lossless system Power out = Power in which means the power that the propeller needs comes from the motor and translates to (toque x RPM)/k = Current x voltage. Given two motors of the same Kv running at the same RPM means they are also running at the same voltage thus the current must be the same for both. That was demonstrated by my test case 1. The battery must supply the power required by the propeller plus losses to the system which is what the power meter reads. If I did this on a dynamometer we would find the power output to the propeller would be something different due losses to heat. Given the current between the two motors for running the propeller is the same the power losses would be the same as well. There is a small difference between my two motors 940 Kv vs 970 Kv which would account for the small power difference between them. This was test and demonstration of your previous input.

My test case 2 is an off point condition. In the practical world two otherwise identical motors of different diameters are hard to find so we , whom do things empirically, do the next best thing, find two motors with the same Kv and different diameters. Unfortunately the size comes along with it. I happened to have on hand two 4S cell sized  motors which is why I did what I did. If I had a 280 Watt Cobra 28xx/y to use that's what I would have done but they don't make one and I don't have one. The only option is get a bigger motor. This test test shows the impact of efficiency and losses. What happens is the smaller motor is running near it's peak efficiency while motor two is down it's curve. As more load is applied the smaller motor falls off and requires more input power to overcome it's losses. This is the practical side of empirical development. What it shows is that if the currently installed motor is performing within it's efficiency range range changing to a larger diameter won't make an impact on the work provided by the battery, ie "how many milliamp hours put back in". Actually Watt hours...

The point is, as long as the currently installed motor is running within it's useful range, 60% - 80% rated power, changing to a larger diameter motor won't make a big impact on the power. Test case 1. If, the currently installed motor is running near it's peak rated power, changing to a larger motor may make and impact. Test case 2. The dependency is based on whether the maneuvering  loads (power requirement) are pushing the motor into a higher loss or not.
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Offline spare_parts

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #19 on: September 05, 2023, 07:03:58 AM »
When talking motors only mass matters, even then only mass involved in the electromagnetic circuit. The 2820 is 56% heavier than the 2221 and as a result has much more copper area which results in 50% lower resistance that the 2221. That is why it does better at higher currents and is no surprise at all. The big question is how the mass change the flight?

If the motor was larger diameter of the same mass, it would have likely been worse off. The explanation gets into motor design. Like virtually all things, there is no free lunch. When you really start understanding motors it becomes apparent that a more efficient motor should be lighter for a given power output.

Motor application is a list of tradeoffs. If you had a weight limit to contend with in the model or power system, things could be different. For this case the difference in motor mass is 50g or roughly an 18650 cell. If the 2820 had to run one cell less, would it still work out in it's favor? 50g isn't much in the grand scheme of things, but these are real tradeoffs made in designs.
Greg

Offline Igor Burger

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #20 on: September 05, 2023, 08:44:55 AM »
50g isn't much in the grand scheme of things, but these are real tradeoffs made in designs.

If we take the mass position and rotation to the equation, it makes the difference. Motor is in tip of the nose, while battery can be at or behind 50% of the distance from CG. Therefore it has much smaller impact to moment of inertia and in case of nose heavy model also to mass at all.

The other thing is rotating 50g especially on larger diameter also makes problems - 1/ it limits quick RPM changes 2/ causes precession 3/ has stabilizing effect (like flywheel) so I personally prefer those 50g in the battery, not in the motor :- )

Offline Igor Burger

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #21 on: September 05, 2023, 09:05:40 AM »
Nice Igor

I am not an electric motor guru, only a powerplants guy. It doesn't jell in my mind that for a constant Kv a change in diameter results in constant current for a constant power output. Intuitively that doesn't work. In fact, it boggles my brain cells. But it is.

Intuitive is that longer arm will make larger torque, but only for first look. Magnets running on 2x longer arm over the same coil will make 2x larger torque, that is fact, but also 2x larger induced EMF (because it depends on 2x higher mechanic motion speed). That means the same number of turns on arm of larger stator will make 2x larger voltage (back EMF) and that will make the same coil define 1/2 Kv (Kv comes from back EMF) on the same coil. So if you want original kV to be able run at original RPM, it will need 1/2 of turns in coil, and therefore also smaller magnetic force and therefore on larger arm we go back to original torque because Kt = 1/ Kv so it goes back to original torque.

Simply mathematigaly and logically written - if you enlarge diameter so that it should make 2x higher torque, that means you will have 2x larger Kt ... and that since Kv=1/Kt, then you will get 1/2 Kv, and if you rewind the motor back to original Kv, you will need to remove half of turns and you will get back Kv and on smaller coil you will have 1/2 force on 2x larger arm, therefore you will get again the same Kt as you had on smaller motor ... Kt=1/Kv

Even simpler statement ... torque of motor is defined by Kt and not motor diameter as it comes from Kv.

or even sompler ... diameter is irrelevant

 H^^

Offline Igor Burger

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #22 on: September 05, 2023, 09:25:35 AM »
The dependency is based on whether the maneuvering  loads (power requirement) are pushing the motor into a higher loss or not.

Unfortunately it does. I found that really hard corner pushes power train very close to its static run. But it is hard to to simulate, because it depends on prop geometry. Especially low pitch props making high static thrust load motor during maneuvering more.

But there is another problem, and it is PWM. While iron loses depends more on mechanical properties, they are simply to estimate. But copper loses depending on current are not so easy. If we have 50% PWM in governor mode, then loses in copper are 4x higher compared to 100% PWM of the same motor and load - that is because of that square at current - if it takes 10A 100% PWM on 1 ohm (1*10^2 =100W), chopped feeding by 50% on and then 50% off, will make 20A in duty cycle what is 400W, what makes motor overloaded during duty cycle. That makes motor run as it is overloaded (compared to iron loses). It heats only by 200W, but it has no impact on its working point choice.

Fortunately duty cycle gets longer on loaded motor, so that low efficiency regime is not so harmful, it happens only on unloaded motor.   

Offline Mark wood

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #23 on: September 05, 2023, 09:53:37 AM »
Unfortunately it does. I found that really hard corner pushes power train very close to its static run. But it is hard to to simulate, because it depends on prop geometry. Especially low pitch props making high static thrust load motor during maneuvering more.

But there is another problem, and it is PWM. While iron loses depends more on mechanical properties, they are simply to estimate. But copper loses depending on current are not so easy. If we have 50% PWM in governor mode, then loses in copper are 4x higher compared to 100% PWM of the same motor and load - that is because of that square at current - if it takes 10A 100% PWM on 1 ohm (1*10^2 =100W), chopped feeding by 50% on and then 50% off, will make 20A in duty cycle what is 400W, what makes motor overloaded during duty cycle. That makes motor run as it is overloaded (compared to iron loses). It heats only by 200W, but it has no impact on its working point choice.

Fortunately duty cycle gets longer on loaded motor, so that low efficiency regime is not so harmful, it happens only on unloaded motor.

Exactly what I was implying. Well, yours is more specific.  I get it Igor.
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Offline spare_parts

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #24 on: September 19, 2023, 07:28:15 AM »
But there is another problem, and it is PWM. While iron loses depends more on mechanical properties, they are simply to estimate. But copper loses depending on current are not so easy. If we have 50% PWM in governor mode, then loses in copper are 4x higher compared to 100% PWM of the same motor and load - that is because of that square at current - if it takes 10A 100% PWM on 1 ohm (1*10^2 =100W), chopped feeding by 50% on and then 50% off, will make 20A in duty cycle what is 400W, what makes motor overloaded during duty cycle. That makes motor run as it is overloaded (compared to iron loses). It heats only by 200W, but it has no impact on its working point choice.

Fortunately duty cycle gets longer on loaded motor, so that low efficiency regime is not so harmful, it happens only on unloaded motor.

But this doesn't represent a motor. 50hz frame rate ESC of a lifetime ago were as you describe.



Current continues to flow during FET off time during the PWM cycle. There is some additional copper loss due to motor current fluctuation. Part throttle current will never exceed static current (ignoring stalled props at low speed), so part throttle losses in the motor will never exceed full throttle. Doubling source voltage with ~50% duty cycle to get the same RPM, results in more loss due to the variation in the current waveform, but far less than 4x. I did some of these tests probably 20 years ago with RC equipment. In one test doubling voltage and reducing duty cycle(approx. 50%, I didn't measure duty cycle) at fixed RPM resulted in 19% more power from the source. This was only 100W input to a large motor and ESC so as to not burn anything up. ESC design and characteristics have an influence also. 50% duty cycle is the worst case for PWM induced losses in a motor.

Greg

Offline Igor Burger

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Re: Large diameter can vs. small which pulls less amp same load?
« Reply #25 on: September 19, 2023, 08:01:48 AM »
I did not write it will exceed static current, and I also wrote that is is not so straightforward. That example of full current vs 0 current was example to explain why loses go up if we feed motor with PWM instead of flat voltage. ANY form of input voltage - wave, saw, rectangles will cause higher copper loses in winding than flat voltage. That is what is going on and what I wanted explain. Reason is that square function.


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