jhudler
Mechanical
- Sep 22, 2007
- 8
I have a project creating an epoxy based granite material.
The sphere packing density is quite high with aggregate sizes from 2 to 600 microns.
So that means I'm left with a very thick mix.
Plus the added complication of doing this in a vacuum.
Requirements:
I need to make a shaker/vibration unit (freq from 10 to 2000 Hz).
Using a motor to vibrate has been tried and it overheats... go figure !
Materials:
1 inch diam x 2 inch long Neodymium magnet.
Lots of magnet wire and even a coil winder.
Supposition:
It seems to me that I could mount magnet to base to vibrate, then create a coil around the magnet (with suitable separation) and drive that? I can dissipate the heat with a simple water jacket created from aluminum tubing and encapsulate that with an epoxy mixture designed to conduct heat which would be mounted to the rack in the chamber.
Question:
Is it possible to create a simple voice coil using a cylindrical magnet?
If so given almost 13000 Gauss, how do I calculate the coil parameters (windings,gauge,amps,voltage).
Or do I need to resort to using Axially magnetized magnet setup found in speakers?
Or perhaps there are other ideas.
Thanks,
Jack
The sphere packing density is quite high with aggregate sizes from 2 to 600 microns.
So that means I'm left with a very thick mix.
Plus the added complication of doing this in a vacuum.
Requirements:
I need to make a shaker/vibration unit (freq from 10 to 2000 Hz).
Using a motor to vibrate has been tried and it overheats... go figure !
Materials:
1 inch diam x 2 inch long Neodymium magnet.
Lots of magnet wire and even a coil winder.
Supposition:
It seems to me that I could mount magnet to base to vibrate, then create a coil around the magnet (with suitable separation) and drive that? I can dissipate the heat with a simple water jacket created from aluminum tubing and encapsulate that with an epoxy mixture designed to conduct heat which would be mounted to the rack in the chamber.
Question:
Is it possible to create a simple voice coil using a cylindrical magnet?
If so given almost 13000 Gauss, how do I calculate the coil parameters (windings,gauge,amps,voltage).
Or do I need to resort to using Axially magnetized magnet setup found in speakers?
Or perhaps there are other ideas.
Thanks,
Jack