It just so happens I have the dual motor (2 per side on my cat) setup with a genset. The genset is a 15KW 240v AC rectified to 144V DC, my battery voltage. I run the genset up to 164V to charge the batteries and run the motors. Also direct drive to the 18” props. The dual motor (1 side) setup will run on 1 motor when one of the dual controllers goes bad which it did a few years ago. I was able to continue under 1 motor on that side and the 2 on the other (reduced speed to balance the thrust) side. I don’t remember what speed I maintained but would guess somewhere around 5 or 6 knots. See attached diagram.
The Genset puts out 90A under full load providing 40A MAX to each side and some to the battery pack. The motors are capable of eating up to 100A each side and are limited by the genset under full throttle so some earlier comments about over sizing the motors was done on my boat. I’ve never had a case where the motors overheated with fresh air fans sucking in cooler outside air to ventilate the engine compartments. Temperature sensors located in the compartments indicate a max temp. of 85deg in the middle of the summer so I don’t feel that area would be an issue with just vents. However I did have a few times when the genset went off line. I believe this was do to the Rectifier over heating not the genset itself. I’m not sure why this occurred but temperatures and cooling the genset was not a problem and this hasn’t occurred again in 2 years after replacing a couple of relays found to be weak. The Rectifier isn’t in the best location for cooling and has no additional ventilation.
If I hit the lottery I would replace the genset with a 22KW DC genset and roughly 140A available to do everything.
I think the question is if you’re thinking about running the A/C to cool the motors how much power are you wasting to do that when if you just oversize the motors a bit you can run them within their safety factor? By the way the motors I have have been tested to 120A for 12 hours with no harm.
Steve in Solomons MD
Lagoon 410 SE
WELL, I am certain that everyone who has attempted to clue me in will be pleased to know that finally an explanation stuck and I now believe I understand why belt drives are not only quite acceptable but actually an advantage for the motors in a normal environment. Perhaps the new morning has refreshed my brain a bit.
Yet another question.
There are times when I must take my boat through a tidal flow. I try to avoid them but very occasionally I hit a destination at precisely the wrong time. In this circumstance I need to have maximum hull speed available and would therefore have to press the motors fairly hard. Motors cutting out in those moments in order to save themselves from heat overload would be really bad.
I am wondering if a genset powering the motors to their full extent combined with a bit of extreme additional cooling would be a way to ensure power when it is really needed. Perhaps duct the air conditioning direct to the motors or arrange for some sort of water jacket or perhaps even more unrealistically pack the motors in dry ice. :-)
Certainly it would help some but I am wondering about the heat transfer through the windings and if that would be sufficient to allow a hyper cooled motor exterior and or air circulation to be effective. Perhaps the cooling would only thwart the sensors and by doing so allow the motors to harm itself at the level of the deepest windings?
Perhaps a third motor if the situation is marginal? I'd definitely have to run the motors through some shutdown testing in order to understand when such an event would be likely to occur.
Would anyone have any thoughts on any of this?
From: Jeremy <jeremy_harris_uk@yahoo.com>
To:
Sent: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 5:04 AM
Subject: [Electric Boats] Re: belt drives vs directly coupled motor shafts and torque
The challenge is getting the best compromise.
For any electric motor, of any flavour, increasing the torque it has to deliver will increase the current, which in turn will increase the losses due to that current (primarily power lost to the resistance of the winding, cables, controller an internal battery resistance).
Losses due to resistance aren't linear, they are proportional to the square of the current. In simple terms this means that running a motor at half the rpm but twice the torque, rather than use a 2:1 reduction drive, will just about double the current and quadruple the power lost from the total system circuit resistance.
In contrast, some types of reduction drive have fairly constant losses over a wide range of drive torque. Toothed belts, for example, have most of their loss from flexing the belts around the pulleys, which isn't torque dependent. A 25mm wide 5M HTD or GT2 belt may only lose around 15 watts or so at typical boat reduction ratios and rpm, although the losses increase fairly steeply with the thicker belts with broader teeth. To this has to be added the bearing and seal frictional loss, which can be surprisingly high (if, like me, you're working with low power).
Gears tend to have a fairly strongly torque related tooth frictional loss, which may be a couple of % or so.
Overall, the loss in a reduction drive is almost always less than the loss from running the motor at a higher current, so it usually pays to use one. Having said that, it is well worth looking hard at whether this is the best option for your requirement, as sometimes it can make sense to just use a significantly over-size motor and under-run it to keep the resistive losses low. This approach doesn't scale well, but for low power applications it can work efficiently.
Jeremy
--- In electricboats@yahoogroups.com, Michael Mccomb <mccomb.michael@...> wrote:
>
> aren't belt drives inherently inefficient if one compares that method of connection to a directly coupled shaft?
>
> AND...
>
> if electric motors produce the same torque at any rpm then why would one wish to gear an electric motor either up or down? wouldn't one simply want a slower revving more efficient propeller and then run a motor rated to run at 2400 rpm or more at 1000 rpm instead? i understand the cooling might be an issue with some motors due to the fans being an integral part of the motor but surely a secondary dedicated fan system could make up the difference for VERY little wattage
>
> again, am i missing something.... BLDCs do run at constant torque do they not?
>
Attachment(s) from Steve Dolan
1 of 1 File(s)
No comments:
Post a Comment