travin69
Nuclear
- Aug 5, 2012
- 2
Hello All.
Looking for some overall suggestions from the forum on designing an electromagnetic coil. Here are the parameters I have so far:
DC powered at 12V. 50% duty cycle. Using 0.500" 1018 CRS as core. 26AWG magnetic wire wound on a bobbin that is 1" long, 0.577" center ID, 2" OD, and 1.750" long. Wire is wound bifiliar and wires are parallel to each other. Each wire is wound about 1000 turns on the coil. Coils are wired electrically parallel with a total resistance of 4.5 ohms. Each coil has an individual resistance of about 9 ohms. For the sake of argument, lets just assume that the coils draw 1 amp each.
Here are my particular questions:
1) Since I am powering the coils in the same direction, do the ampere-turns equal 2000? If not, can someone explain how bifilar coils wound parallel act when wired and powered in the same direction (polarity).
2) Would the coil be stronger if I wound 2 seperate coils of 1000 turns each on the same coil but one coil was wound behind the other?
3) Is there any thumbrule that says that windings that are further away from the coil are less effective? Bascially, are short, fat coils less strong than long, skinny coils assuming windings and power are the same?
4) Do pulsed dc electromagnetic coils have hystoresis / eddy current losses like AC coils do?
Thanks for any help you all can give me.
Daniel
Looking for some overall suggestions from the forum on designing an electromagnetic coil. Here are the parameters I have so far:
DC powered at 12V. 50% duty cycle. Using 0.500" 1018 CRS as core. 26AWG magnetic wire wound on a bobbin that is 1" long, 0.577" center ID, 2" OD, and 1.750" long. Wire is wound bifiliar and wires are parallel to each other. Each wire is wound about 1000 turns on the coil. Coils are wired electrically parallel with a total resistance of 4.5 ohms. Each coil has an individual resistance of about 9 ohms. For the sake of argument, lets just assume that the coils draw 1 amp each.
Here are my particular questions:
1) Since I am powering the coils in the same direction, do the ampere-turns equal 2000? If not, can someone explain how bifilar coils wound parallel act when wired and powered in the same direction (polarity).
2) Would the coil be stronger if I wound 2 seperate coils of 1000 turns each on the same coil but one coil was wound behind the other?
3) Is there any thumbrule that says that windings that are further away from the coil are less effective? Bascially, are short, fat coils less strong than long, skinny coils assuming windings and power are the same?
4) Do pulsed dc electromagnetic coils have hystoresis / eddy current losses like AC coils do?
Thanks for any help you all can give me.
Daniel