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#1
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more power to electric outboard motor
Hello
I bought an electric outboard motor to my rowing boat. Motor is made in Russia. As you all can guess the thrust isnīt wery good. Itīs poor. Motor works normally with 12v. battery, and I was thinking if it can handle two 12v. batteries in series. Voltage and current would then rise to double. If the motor doesnīt break it will go faster, right? What do you think? Can the motor handle the extra 12volts or will it break? thanks. |
#2
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more power to electric outboard motor
Break!
"Tero" wrote in message ... Hello I bought an electric outboard motor to my rowing boat. Motor is made in Russia. As you all can guess the thrust isnīt wery good. Itīs poor. Motor works normally with 12v. battery, and I was thinking if it can handle two 12v. batteries in series. Voltage and current would then rise to double. If the motor doesnīt break it will go faster, right? What do you think? Can the motor handle the extra 12volts or will it break? thanks. |
#3
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more power to electric outboard motor
"Tero" kirjoitti viestissä ... Hello I bought an electric outboard motor to my rowing boat. Motor is made in Russia. As you all can guess the thrust isnīt wery good. Itīs poor. Motor works normally with 12v. battery, and I was thinking if it can handle two 12v. batteries in series. Voltage and current would then rise to double. If the motor doesnīt break it will go faster, right? What do you think? Can the motor handle the extra 12volts or will it break? thanks. addition: Motor has no speed control so there is only wires to the motor and the on-off-switch in the between. So the motor will burn? wires and switch are easy to change to bigger. |
#4
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more power to electric outboard motor
"Tero" wrote in message ... Hello I bought an electric outboard motor to my rowing boat. Motor is made in Russia. As you all can guess the thrust isnīt wery good. Itīs poor. Motor works normally with 12v. battery, and I was thinking if it can handle two 12v. batteries in series. Voltage and current would then rise to double. If the motor doesnīt break it will go faster, right? What do you think? Can the motor handle the extra 12volts or will it break? Motor is submerged (?), so it likely will not incinerate itself. BUT, much shorter brush life, brush holders will run hotter, so maybe they will fail, or maybe the brush springs will lose strength. Also, more load on the shaft bearings, so they will not last as long either. If, due to sloppy manufacture, you have a poor internal wire connection, then this may be the first point of failure. Next most likely is the brush structure or the brushes themselves. Possibly, the motor winding heat may degrade the wire insulation, hastening a short (either turn-to-turn or turn to frame). The non-technical answer is that, yes, doubling the voltage will kill the motor. How, and how soon, is difficult to say. It may last 2 years or 20 minutes. You are quite right, "if it doesn't break, it will go faster." And it will go faster until it breaks. And need I add that Russian consumer products are not, uhh, highly respected to begin with? Ed |
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