Yes.I wanted to put in the Ohms of the coils was I putting it in the right place in the program?
Hold down the Ctrl key and left-click the title of the blue trace. You'll get average Wattage in a drop-down box.how do you get 65watts from this
Sadly, that's the case, unless you can source bigger coils with lower resistance but a similar number of turns.I can't get around the resistances, they simply are what they are!
so how would this play out if the, the 15watt load from a 30volt supply needs 0.5 amps, across the four coils that 0.125amps each coil, 50ohm * 0.125Amp, the drop across each coil would only be 6.25volts across the 50 ohm coil resistance!Sadly, that's the case, unless you can source bigger coils with lower resistance but a similar number of turns.
Driving a 15W load from a 30V supply needs 0.5A current, but 0.5A would drop 25V across a 50 Ohm coil resistance.
Because the circuit configuration uses both halves of the AC waveform and is in effect a voltage doubler.why does the capbank charge to over 60volts if the voltage off of the coils is only 40volts?
The peak voltage is 40V, the RMS is less, and the coil resistance drops voltage.if the coils are producing 40volt why would it go down to 30volt?
I haven't forgotten. The coils aren't in parallel. The coil voltages are not in phase (they're in quadrature in the sim, but in the real world they would be time-separated according to the coil spacing around your machine).you're forgotten one thing, the 15watt load is driven by four coils that have 50ohm each!
I haven't forgotten. The coils aren't in parallel. The coil voltages are not in phase (they're in quadrature in the sim, but in the real world they would be time-separated according to the coil spacing around your machine).Because the circuit configuration uses both halves of the AC waveform and is in effect a voltage doubler.
the coils on the front are 12 O'clock and 9 O'clock the coils ont the back (still looking from the front) are 9 O'clock and 6 O'clock! thanksI haven't forgotten. The coils aren't in parallel. The coil voltages are not in phase (they're in quadrature in the sim, but in the real world they would be time-separated according to the coil spacing around your machine).
Because the circuit configuration uses both halves of the AC waveform and is in effect a voltage doubler.