rbrauns
Petroleum
- Oct 30, 2014
- 2
Hello,
New to the forum. I did do search and found lots of good posts but none the really answer my question so here is my question:
With AC traction induction motors being used more and more for transportation (hybrid cars, trains, etc), why aren't any AC induction motors made with aluminum wiring in the stator? I checked some basic math and if I took a 1000 Watt motor with 14 gage wire and had 10 turns per pole but ran it with 100 Volts and 10 amps, that motor would produce a certain amount of HP and torque. If I assume a 10 foot length of wire for the windings, let's say I substitute aluminum windings but use a smaller gage, say 16 BUT run 5 amps through that motor and use 200 V. Doubling the number of windings per pole but keeping the current half of the lower voltage motor, should produce the same torque assuming I use 20 feet of smaller gage aluminum wire. Is that right so far?
If I calculate the I2R losses using the aluminum wire, I get the same 5.5 Watt loss as the copper wire. That should keep the heat down. Keep the same thought and what happens if I have a 500 volt motor, 2 amp draw and 50 windings per pole? Everything else in the motor stays the same, if possible. The cores may have to get a bit bigger to accomodate the bigger windings. That would make a physically big motor but aluminum is so much lighter and cheaper than copper that someone, somewhere should have produced a motor with aluminum windings by now, so what am I missing?
Sorry if the question is not appropriate but I'm stuck and hope that someone can help me out.
Thanking you all in advance for your help.
Kind Regards,
Robert B.
New to the forum. I did do search and found lots of good posts but none the really answer my question so here is my question:
With AC traction induction motors being used more and more for transportation (hybrid cars, trains, etc), why aren't any AC induction motors made with aluminum wiring in the stator? I checked some basic math and if I took a 1000 Watt motor with 14 gage wire and had 10 turns per pole but ran it with 100 Volts and 10 amps, that motor would produce a certain amount of HP and torque. If I assume a 10 foot length of wire for the windings, let's say I substitute aluminum windings but use a smaller gage, say 16 BUT run 5 amps through that motor and use 200 V. Doubling the number of windings per pole but keeping the current half of the lower voltage motor, should produce the same torque assuming I use 20 feet of smaller gage aluminum wire. Is that right so far?
If I calculate the I2R losses using the aluminum wire, I get the same 5.5 Watt loss as the copper wire. That should keep the heat down. Keep the same thought and what happens if I have a 500 volt motor, 2 amp draw and 50 windings per pole? Everything else in the motor stays the same, if possible. The cores may have to get a bit bigger to accomodate the bigger windings. That would make a physically big motor but aluminum is so much lighter and cheaper than copper that someone, somewhere should have produced a motor with aluminum windings by now, so what am I missing?
Sorry if the question is not appropriate but I'm stuck and hope that someone can help me out.
Thanking you all in advance for your help.
Kind Regards,
Robert B.