Pressure Effects on Motors
Does anybody know if a standard electric motor would keep working if it's in a pressurised atmosphere? I have an idea for a remote trigger burst disk, basically the motor would be in the chamber and puncture a burst disk.
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- homedepotpro
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yeah it would, it may not spin at full rpm's thought because of the increased air resistance
- Modderxtrordanare
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It might get damaged from all that air rushing past it as well.
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So long as its mounted strongly, and whatever its trying to move won't get thrown around by the rapid airflow and break the motor, it should be fine.
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Im going to assume it will just spin something that will break some tin foil, then it will still work. unless you are working with some crazy, incredibly unsafe pressure.
if its something more complex, it still should, but i would suppose that there has to be some exception.
Motors are cheap, give it a try!!
if its something more complex, it still should, but i would suppose that there has to be some exception.
Motors are cheap, give it a try!!
Thanks for the input, I didn't think about when the air is released, if the motor casing was near airtight it might not relieve pressure fast enough and explode.
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Probably like people mount fans inside of their combustions.frankrede wrote:How do you plan on mounting the motor?
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I've put a motor with a bunch of little metal "sticks" coming off of it inside a cloud BBMG to help feeding. It was supposed to hit the BBs and make them jump around more, or swat them towards the barrel. Never worked.
Why don't you make an electromagnet like the solenoids to trigger the burst disk? I mean... as long as you're working with electric power, I think a linear motor would be more efficient for linear motion, ya?
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I would think that a motor operating in a high pressure enviroment would actually be more efficient than one in normal air. If the motor is self ventilating, the higher density air will absorb more heat than it normally would, allowing the motor to run cooler. There might be a slight rpm loss due to venting more air (weight), but it probably won't be noticable.
Like Fiveseven said, a solenoid motor consiting of a copper coil and a ferromagnetic priming rod would probably work better. You could even have the coil on the outside, assuming your chamber is plastic.
Lookup how coilguns work, it's the same idea.
Like Fiveseven said, a solenoid motor consiting of a copper coil and a ferromagnetic priming rod would probably work better. You could even have the coil on the outside, assuming your chamber is plastic.
Lookup how coilguns work, it's the same idea.