"It is impossible to design a commutatorless dc machine.". This sketch and the paragraph above it appear to have come from a 1946 publication.
I don't think that transistors (and particularly power transistors, MOSFETs and IGBTs, etc.) existed back then.
I think the statement made in 1946 remains true, if we use the word "brushless" instead of commutatorless. If we want to power the device with true dc where the dc lives in a stationary reference frame, then we get the required voltage induction only when conductors are rotating with respect to the stationary ref frame where the dc power supply lives, as shown by your wikipedia article. So I think we can say the true brushless dc motor cannot exist.
Today's brushed DC motors are being replaces by BLDC motors. In addition, it is looking like Sensorless BLDC motors may start replacing the Hall Effect device, and, encoders in some applications.
As Bill suggested the term BLDC seems a little bit of a marketing misnomer. My understanding is typical BLDC resembles polyphase PM rotor synchronous motor, except instead of supplying it with sinusoidal ac, we supply it with switched and there can be a lot of intelligence built into the switching controls which perhaps resemble similar control flexibility in dc motors. There are others on the forum that know a lot more about BLDC than me.
Might it be possible to produce an operational 'unhomopolar' motor by pulsing the power and electronically reading the electrical activity?????
Again, I think it would be a challenge to try to apply your existing device as BLDC since you have a single winding rather than polyphase winding. And if you made it a polyphase winding, I think it would make sense to swap your magnets to alternating polarities rather than same polarity.
I have to step back and ask the big picture question now....what is your main objective from this thread:[ul]
[li]to modify the existing motor?[/li]
[li]to learn about motors in general?[/li]
[li]to build a motor from scratch?[/li]
[li]to choose an available motor?[/li][/ul]
On the last two it usually helps to describe your application requirements and ask forum members for suggestions. Maybe even start a new thread with your clarified objective.
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