DocumentCode
1166061
Title
Synthesis of Induction Motor Designs on a Digital Computer
Author
Veinott, C.G.
Volume
79
Issue
3
fYear
1960
fDate
4/1/1960 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
12
Lastpage
18
Abstract
It is the engineer, then, who indicates the performance desired and the magnetic cores on which he desires the winding to be developed. The computer develops the most satisfactory winding that is possible within these prescribed limitations, and reports the predicted performance of the machine as predicted by the design analysis method. It also gives the winding which is needed in the machine. Considerable flexibility is allowed as indicated. Fig. 5 shows the computer room where the procedures discussed in this paper are in daily use. In addition, many mechanical design calculations are performed such as shaft and bearing loading, shaft deflections, critical speeds, commutator design. Much d-c design work is done here. This computer is the same Alwac III described in the author´s earlier paper1 except for the addition of the high-speed papertape-handling console and off-line flexowriter which comes close to tripling the potential output of the computer. Fig. 6 shows additional engineering data computed on the example. These consist of half-voltage locked-rotor torque and amperes, performance over a range of loads to 150% and a speedtorque curve which takes into account the effect of saturation of the leakage flux paths.
Keywords
Commutation; Data engineering; Design methodology; Induction motors; Machine windings; Magnetic analysis; Magnetic cores; Performance analysis; Shafts; Torque;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Power Apparatus and Systems, Part III. Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0097-2460
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/AIEEPAS.1960.4500685
Filename
4500685
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