Hi abikerider,
I was in a hurry and didn't write down any readings. I cut the coils with the lamination intact. I left a small tab on the base of each and mounted them in sets of two using the laminated steel from a defective vintage Whizzer magneto. I cut the 2 sides off the vintage "E" bar and used the long sides to connect them. The metal exiting the windings is in fact from a system where the magnets in the flywheel pass outside the coils. I spaced the center laminated .010" from the flywheel. The metal isn't shaped correctly to maximize the magnetic transfer, but gave me a fair amount of wattage, I am not completly sure but I think I was pulling about 3 watts at higher RPMs on one of the early tests, but the voltage wasn't at 12V, more like 9.5 to 10V.
Maybe I will find some extra time in a few weeks to work on it again. I do plan on cutting the edges of the laminated metal to match the outside shape of the flywheel. I will put each coil in my mill and reverse the shape of the metal as it leaves the windings.
So far I have only worked with direct output, and haven't played with caps, diodes, or reguators yet.
I really think it is going to need several coils to get what we need. Maybe 2 "C" bars with 3 coils each might deliver enough.
Have fun,
I was in a hurry and didn't write down any readings. I cut the coils with the lamination intact. I left a small tab on the base of each and mounted them in sets of two using the laminated steel from a defective vintage Whizzer magneto. I cut the 2 sides off the vintage "E" bar and used the long sides to connect them. The metal exiting the windings is in fact from a system where the magnets in the flywheel pass outside the coils. I spaced the center laminated .010" from the flywheel. The metal isn't shaped correctly to maximize the magnetic transfer, but gave me a fair amount of wattage, I am not completly sure but I think I was pulling about 3 watts at higher RPMs on one of the early tests, but the voltage wasn't at 12V, more like 9.5 to 10V.
Maybe I will find some extra time in a few weeks to work on it again. I do plan on cutting the edges of the laminated metal to match the outside shape of the flywheel. I will put each coil in my mill and reverse the shape of the metal as it leaves the windings.
So far I have only worked with direct output, and haven't played with caps, diodes, or reguators yet.
I really think it is going to need several coils to get what we need. Maybe 2 "C" bars with 3 coils each might deliver enough.
Have fun,