Ball Bearing Motor - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia

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Ball bearing motorFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A ball bearing motor is an unusual electric motor that consists of two ball-bearing-type bearings, with the inner

races mounted on a common conductive shaft, and the outer races connected to a high current, low voltage power

supply. An alternative construction fits the outer races inside a metal tube, while the inner races are mounted on a

shaft with a non-conductive section (e.g. two sleeves on an insulating rod). This method has the advantage that the

tube will act as a flywheel. The direction of rotation is determined by the initial spin which is usually required to get it

going.

S. Marinov suggests that the device produces motion from electricity without magnetism being involved, operating

purely by thermal means.[1] The same explanation is given by Watson, Patel and Sedcole for rotating cylinders

(instead of balls).[2] However, H. Gruenberg has given a thorough theoretical explanation based on pure

electromagnetism (and neglecting the thermal effects completely).[3] Also, P. Hatzikonstantinou and P. G.

Moyssides claim to have found an excellent agreement between the results from the electromagnetic theory and the

experiments measuring the total power and efficiency of the motor.[4]

This motor could also be described as a concentric rail gun.[citation needed]

See also

Homopolar generator

Homopolar motor

Faraday Paradox

References

1. ^ Mike Harrison. "The Ball-Bearing electric motor" (http://www.electricstuff.co.uk/bbmotor.html) .

http://www.electricstuff.co.uk/bbmotor.html. Retrieved 2006-10-08.

2. ^ D. B. Watson, S. M. Patel, N. P. Sedcole. Ball-bearing motor effect with rolling cylinders. IEE Proc.-Sci. M eas.

Technol., Vol. 146, No. 2, March 1999.[1] (http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=766536)

3. ^ H. Gruenberg. The ball bearing as a motor. American Journal of Physics, Dec. 1978, Vol. 46, Issue 12, pp.

1213-1219.[2] (http://scitation.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?

prog=normal&id=AJPIAS000046000012001213000001&idtype=cvips&gifs=yes)

4. ^ P. Hatzikonstantinou, P. G. Moyssides. Explanation of the ball bearing motor and exact solutions of the related

Maxwell equations. Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and General, Volume 23, Issue 14, pp. 3183-3197

(1990).[3] (http://www.iop.org/EJ/abstract/0305-4470/23/14/017) [4]

(http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1990JPhA...23.3183H)

External links

The Ball-Bearing electric motor (http://www.electricstuff.co.uk/bbmotor.html)

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ball_bearing_motor"

Categories: Electric motors

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