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Battery Charging using DC Motor

Former Member
Former Member over 10 years ago

I have been trying to wrap this idea around my head that I can successfully charge a battery by using a DC motor.  Here is the example:  You have let's say a 16,000mAh 6S Lipo Battery.  This battery is your primary energy source.  This battery will power a brush-less DC motor.  When the DC motor is creating high RPM's, this energy would be used to recharge the primary battery, while also powering other components within the device.  In this example, the device housing these components would be a cooling fan for a motor design I am working on. 

 

Is this possible?

 

If it is, one thing I concern myself with, is that the battery designs of today, mostly only have one connection, which is used to plug into the charger or to plug into the device you wish to operate.  If this is in fact possible, I would like to speak further with you on perhaps helping me develop a solution.  Thanks!

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  • jw0752
    jw0752 over 10 years ago +4 suggested
    Hi Dan, shabaz is correct. If you make a motor spin with a battery the energy comes from the battery and is converted to mechanical energy and heat in the motor. In order to charge a battery with a motor…
  • jw0752
    jw0752 over 10 years ago in reply to mrsyfy +4 suggested
    Hi Douglas, Thinking outside the box is good. shabaz did a good job of summarizing and expanding my post. Certainly some energy can be recovered if there is a need for the energy and if it is economically…
  • michaelkellett
    michaelkellett over 8 years ago in reply to empresario +4 suggested
    I am quite sure that you have NOT seen any such thing but it may be that some freak circumstances or clever tricks have deceived you. If you could describe what you have seen and better still offer pictures…
  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 9 years ago

    Seems to me, that if you generate 120 volts from say an alternator. Then you can plug in a battery charger and fans and everyone is happy. I'm working on a similar project.

    i need to charge my trolling motor battery. I'm trying to create more power than I use . A 12 volt motor makes 120 . This in turn powers2 battery chargers. I got to say , it hasn't happend yet. But I won't give up.

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  • empresario
    0 empresario over 8 years ago

    i have a local self charge power generator. am yet to come up with reasonable scientific explaination. until then do not doubt the imposible cuz it is already there in nature

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  • empresario
    0 empresario over 8 years ago in reply to Capper

    it is possible and i have seen such

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  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 8 years ago in reply to empresario

    I am quite sure that you have NOT seen any such thing but it may be that some freak circumstances or clever tricks have deceived you.

     

    If you could describe what you have seen and better still offer pictures or links I'm sure that plenty of E14 people will be very happy to explain what you might have seen - and why it doesn't do what it seems.

     

    MK

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  • Robert Peter Oakes
    0 Robert Peter Oakes over 8 years ago in reply to empresario

    Wow, it is very simple and a few good engineers have already tried to explain

     

    There is no free lunch, there is no system that is 100% efficient, never mind over 100%, there are some very lab science research specific examples that are close to 100% but still less than 100%

     

    Due to friction, Heat, Resistance, etc you will NEVER get out what you put in. Conservation of energy is real and a fact.

     

    Do you really believe that if I connect a motor to a battery, the motor will get to the point where it is not drawing power from the battery and in fact can reverse the flow and start charging the battery instead, this would mean that the motor (Lets say it takes 100W to turn it) it is generating over 100W internally + any heat loss, friction loss and resistance loss, then in addition, it is generating enough to also re-charge the battery, this would mean it is generating in excess of perhaps 120W on its own. therefore if you could simply start the motor spinning without a battery (Perhaps a lawn mower starter cord) you could have it power a 20W light bulb and itself forever, now that would sell right. but it is impossible.

     

    This goes right along with Water Seer Wind-powered Water Seer pulls 11 gallons of clean drinking water from thin air | Inhabitat - Green Design, Innovation, A…

    Solar Roadways Home - SolarRoadways

    and the like. Actually both the roadways and the water seer will actually partially work at least, given just the right circumstances, just won't be returning any investment in the next 10,000 years or so... and are so far from meeting even part of their claims it's not funny

     

    When you get a bunch of really good engineers telling you the same thing, perhaps they have a point?

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  • pettitda
    0 pettitda over 8 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    I suppose if you had two sets of armature coils you could technically "charge" the battery from one set of coils and discharge the battery from the other set of coils.  Although arguably you couldn't say you were charging the battery because the net flow of current would be out of the battery not into it.  It would be more of a Rube Goldberg experiment than anything else.

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  • ntewinkel
    0 ntewinkel over 8 years ago in reply to Robert Peter Oakes

    Due to friction, Heat, Resistance, etc you will NEVER get out what you put in. Conservation of energy is real and a fact.

    Agreed - the only way to get more energy than you put in is to steal it from somewhere else.

    For example, heat pumps are considered more than 100% efficient (compared to direct use of electrical energy through a resistor for heat) because they move warmth from outside of the house to inside. But the "free" energy is obtained from the heat in the outside air.

     

    I don't see how the Wind-powered water generator and solar roadways pertain to this free energy question.

    I might be reading it wrong, but that wind-powered water maker seems to use wind power to push moist warm air down into an underground reservoir which I presume is cooler and causes the water to condense out. Seems legit. I'd never use it here in my temperate rainforest, but I suspect certain desert areas could benefit. Although like you said, might not be worth the investment, especially if drilling a well (where possible) takes less energy to begin with.

     

    The solar roadways use solar panels to generate electricity. Solar panels are already proven legit. Not sure if it's financially worth it, but I guess part of the claim is that those roadways will last longer than regular tar-based pavement. Might work well in places like California where there's plenty of sun and it's never covered by snow. Maybe using those panels just for cross-walk and other special danger areas could be worth it for the safety factor.

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  • Robert Peter Oakes
    0 Robert Peter Oakes over 8 years ago in reply to ntewinkel

    Water Generator... Claims to generate water 7*24*365.

    No Wind, No Water

    No Moisture in the air, no water (Desert Regions)

    you need to dump heat to get the water to condense, this heat goes into the surrounding soil and heats it up, we're talking kilowatts of power based on the claimed water output !!!!!, warm soil = no condensation

    Day and Night... nigh it gets colder, usually colder than the soil, so no condensation

    if there is wind and low humidity, all the wind over the water in the container will evaporate it

     

    anyway, its a complete scam, the physics does not add up, same for solar roadways, same for using the motor to charge the battery is is running from.

     

    There similar because there all examples of where people try to demonstrate breaking the laws of thermoDynamics, Conservation of energy and other fundamentally sound engineering facts by quoting all sorts of fancy terms that have no foundation in true research and appear to just be scamming money from gullible folks who dont know better.

     

    In this case the poster is convinced by the apparent output (Greater than unity gain of input to output ) but does not have the background to know it is not possible

     

    Even your example of the geothermal, if you just stick to energy in vs out rather than money in vs product out, it is still not 100% efficient and certainly not greater than 100%. yes you're providing less PAID for energy that you get out, but that other energy is coming from the surrounding ground

     

    anyway, I digress.

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  • ntewinkel
    0 ntewinkel over 8 years ago in reply to Robert Peter Oakes

    Ah ok I understand, I didn't even think of those details. And yeah I have no idea how soil temperature works in deserts. Here it's generally cooler, but we're relatively quite far North, and I think there's a ground-water factor. The over the top claims especially are where it falls apart (I didn't read those details). Not the first time someone has taken something that's theoretically possible and then added a "marketing spin" to make a buck. It would probably output that amount of water where I live, if you add the rainfall image

     

    And right, thermodynamically speaking heatpumps are definitely not that efficient. It's based on financial and applied-energy efficiency for heating only.

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  • ntewinkel
    0 ntewinkel over 8 years ago in reply to Capper

    Look up regenerative brake

    But the power from regenerative braking comes from slowing down the vehicle. It takes much more energy to get that vehicle moving than you get out of regen braking. Except when going down a hill, but eventually you'll have to get back up that hill.

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