iankent
Electrical
- Dec 16, 2009
- 3
Hi all, new to the forum so please bear with me
will get the hang of it eventually! Looks like a really useful site!
Just a quick question for now. The project I'm working on calls for a motor to be running 24/7 at relatively low speed (perhaps 40-80rpm max), with motor 'blades' which that will be sat in water (along the lines of a food mixer I guess). The setup of the blades would mean a lot of resistance against the motor.
My question is, what sort of motor would be suitable for this, and are there likely to be any issues around overheating or burning out? As the water will also be heated (to about 26C), is there a way I can capture the wasted heat from the motor? I was thinking I could put the motor below water level so the heat would naturally be absorbed by the colder water, but this adds complications around waterproofing unless theres a motor designed for this kind of job?
Also, presumably the power output from the motor will depend largely on the volume of water and the resistance created by the blades? Any quick easy way to estimate what sort of power is required, or should I resort to calculations or trial & error?
edit: in the initial stages of the project we'll be using relatively low volumes of water, around 50L per container.
That actually turned into a few questions lol
thanks in advance for any info you can give
Just a quick question for now. The project I'm working on calls for a motor to be running 24/7 at relatively low speed (perhaps 40-80rpm max), with motor 'blades' which that will be sat in water (along the lines of a food mixer I guess). The setup of the blades would mean a lot of resistance against the motor.
My question is, what sort of motor would be suitable for this, and are there likely to be any issues around overheating or burning out? As the water will also be heated (to about 26C), is there a way I can capture the wasted heat from the motor? I was thinking I could put the motor below water level so the heat would naturally be absorbed by the colder water, but this adds complications around waterproofing unless theres a motor designed for this kind of job?
Also, presumably the power output from the motor will depend largely on the volume of water and the resistance created by the blades? Any quick easy way to estimate what sort of power is required, or should I resort to calculations or trial & error?
edit: in the initial stages of the project we'll be using relatively low volumes of water, around 50L per container.
That actually turned into a few questions lol
thanks in advance for any info you can give