this is my first time posting here also I'm very new to electrical engineering. i am building a pull cord (like a lawn mower) human powered generator and I'm looking for ways to increase the current output.
since i want the device to be as small and portable as possible i had originally bought a basic gimbal motor that is generally used for drone and thought i would turn it into a generator.
i bought the motor that had the lowest kv rating (31), since thats how many rpms it would makes per volt. i figured if i reverse that and treat it as a generator then i would be able to get a high power output at low rpms. i thought since p=iv then if i have a high voltage reading then the current wouldn't be an issue.
however although i was able to get a modest voltage reading (around 30 volts per pull) i didn't take into account that most of that would be lost to heat as i go and charge a pair of lipos. what i need is a way to increase the current so i can charge the batteries faster. I'm thinking maybe if i can increase the torque that would help. I'm trying to be able to charge the batteries as fast as possible, even if it requires more work.
is there a way to increase the current of a generator? or are there already of the shelf motors that have high current? what if i charge ultra capacitors from the generator instead? i know they can charge faster so will they increase the current?
i am very new to all of this. anything helps!!! 🙂
thanks,
ita
Best Answer
Please realize that:
Power = Voltage x Current
So the actual value of the current does not matter !
Hmm, OK, but I still want more current !
Well then, do you have enough voltage ? You mention 30 V, what is the voltage of the battery you're trying to charge ? As long as it is lower than 30V we're OK. You can use an electronic device called a DCDC converter to convert that 30V and too low current into a lower voltage and a proportionally higher current ! This is such a device: DCDC Downconverter module
I would advise to also use some kind of charge control unit since Lithium based batteries are a bit picky concerning charging and especially overcharging.
Probably there are also modules that can do both (lower voltage and increase current, charge control) in one but these are a bit harder to find.
So: keep the motor as-is but use some electronics to connect the generator to the batteries
Hope this helps.