Tue, May 23 2006 @ 19:49 in Switzerland
Contributed by: Mick
Views: 7,306
This is one of the most lucid descriptions of how an alternator works
that I have read. From one of the resident electricity wranglers on
the AeroElectric Connection Matronics List, Brian "Brain" Lloyd.
If you go back to an elementary science class, someone once told you
that if you wave a magnet around a wire, that wire will produce an
electric current. They also probably told you that if you pass a
current through a wire it will produce a magnetic field around the
wire. This was the amazing discovery of Michael Faraday and upon
which all electrical and radio theory is based.
Some alternators or generators do indeed use a permanent magnet
whirling around inside a coil of wire to produce power but the output
is directly proportional to how fast you spin it. If it makes more
output than you need you must find a way to get rid of the excess.
This is not a problem if the output is relatively small but if you
want something that can produce a lot of output for the times when
you need a lot of output, it produces way too much when you don't
need it all. Hence permanent magnet alternators, officially known as
"dynamos", tend to be small things.
But if you want one that can produce a lot of output when needed but
not much output when not needed you need a way to vary the
effectiveness. If you remember the two things that our buddy Mike
discovered, i.e. that moving magnetism generates an electric current
and moving electrons generate magnetism, you have the basic
components you need. If you want to increase the output of your
alternator at a given rotational velocity you need more magntism and
vice versa. So how can we turn the magnatism up and down as needed?
Why, we use a coil of wire with a current flowing through it. If we
increase the current, the magnetism increases and the output of our
alternator increases. If we reduce the current, the output of our
alternator decreases. This electromagnet is the rotating part of the
alternator. It is called the rotor but it is also called the field
winding from the olden days when we used generators.
A generator has the power-producing windings on the spinning part
called the armature and the magnetic field producing part, the field
windings, around the outside. An alternator has the magnetic field
windings on the spinning part (rotor) and the power-producing coils
(stator) are around the outside. You see I keep using the term
"magnetic field producing part" over again. That just got shortened
over time to the word "field".
So the way this whole thing works is to have an external sensor
determine if the alternator is producing as much power as needed. It
does this by measuring the voltage on the bus. If the voltage is too
low it allows more current to flow through the field winding. This
increases the magnetism in the center of the alternator and that then
induces more output in the stator winding. The voltage rises. If the
voltage gets higher than we want the VR reduces the current in the
field, the magnetic field is decreased, the output of the stator
windings is less, and the voltage at output is reduced. To me this
represents PFM (Pure f'n magic) and is also PFN (pretty f'n neat).
Thanks Mike!