Renovator1
Industrial
- Mar 14, 2003
- 72
Sorry about wandering over from the circuit engineering section, but something occurred to me that I could not find the answer to using google...
If all motors can be generators (and I can clearly understand how even an induction motor can be a generator - simply apply a lower frequency to it than it is currently spinning at), how, exactly, can a shaded pole motor be a generator? Is it simply a matter of over-speeding the rotor, as in a conventional induction machine, relying on residual magnetism to initiate a then self-reinforcing magnetic field build-up?
A bit obtuse of a question, I know, but it really has stumped me this evening!
If all motors can be generators (and I can clearly understand how even an induction motor can be a generator - simply apply a lower frequency to it than it is currently spinning at), how, exactly, can a shaded pole motor be a generator? Is it simply a matter of over-speeding the rotor, as in a conventional induction machine, relying on residual magnetism to initiate a then self-reinforcing magnetic field build-up?
A bit obtuse of a question, I know, but it really has stumped me this evening!