viernes, 14 de marzo de 2008
domingo, 9 de marzo de 2008
Máquinas magneto eléctricas
Zenobe Theopile Gramme (b.1826) demonstrated his generator to the Academy of Sciences in Paris in 1871. Unlike the earlier magneto-electric machines, the Gramme machine used a series of thirty armature coils, placed inside a revolving ring of soft iron. The coils are connected in series, and the junction between each pair is connected to a commutator strip on which two brushes run. The permanent magnets magnetize the soft iron ring, producing a magnetic field which rotates around through the coils in order as the armature turns. This induces an EMF in two of the coils on opposite sides of the armature, which is picked off by the brushes. With thirty coils, the resulting voltage waveform is practically constant, thus producing a near DC signal.
This type of machine needs only electromagnets to produce the magnetic field to become a true Generator.
The instrument at the right is on display at Birr Castle in County Offaly, Ireland, and is on loan from Trinity College, Dublin. The Gramme machine at the left is in the lecture demonstration collection at the physics department at the University of Texas at Austin.
It was imported by Queen of Philadelphia and described in the 1888 Queen catalogue as
GRAMME MAGNETO-ELECTRIC MACHINE No. 16. with crank and multiplying gear. All of the experiments pertaining to a course in physics may be shown with this machine, with the exception of voltaic arc light. Two armatures are necessary with it, one of coarse wire for quantity [large currents], and one of fine wire for intensity [high voltages], with some experiments being more successful with the one, and some with the other ... It is equal to about ten cells of Bunsen's Battery, and is very convenient for laboratory use, being easily moved and worked. Price on application."
Enlaces:
Spark Museum
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