Thread: DC Generator
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Martin H. Eastburn
 
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Default DC Generator

Richard J Kinch wrote:

Don Foreman writes:


At 240
volts and 10KW, the avg (DC) current is about 41.6 amps, while the AC
ripple current from rectified single-phase AC will probably be well
under 1 amp. The difference between this and "pure" DC excitation
would not be noticable.



The original post question betrays too much ignorance of what is going on.
10 kW is just to much heat to dissipate on any kind of duty cycle. He may
be trying to duplicate a poorly cobbled prior repair or design.

Besides, that many amps into that big an inductor has gotta produce one
wollop of a surge when you switch it off. Saying you can absorb that with
a reversed diode is like saying you can brake a big diesel engine to a dead
stop by putting your hand on the flywheel. I suspect part of the reason
for the DC generator is that you can clutch out the prime mover, and the
generator becomes a motor to slowly dissipate the stored energy in the
inductor.

You don't know how they turn it on or off. On something like that there could
be several coils a main one and a stepper. The stepper is the extra you need to
grab and take .

The windings are likely browned down and up - not on/off. You want to get it
below pickup to drop and above the safety level to grab.

Martin

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Martin Eastburn, Barbara Eastburn
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