" Seems like 'stock parallel' would be best at 6v (shouldn't be a surprise as that's what it's designed to do) "
____ While I agree the stator was likely designed with a 6-volt system in mind, I wish to point-out that the designers couldn't possibly expect their product to be designed specifically for just 6-volts alone. _ Consequently, it may work equally well within a 3-volt or 12-volt system.
(To expand on the plane-of-thought,, even an alternator that's intended for a 12-volt system will have an easier-time providing charging-juice through a 6-volt battery than a 24-volt battery, as it's RPMs rise-up from 0-RPM. _ As naturally so for ALL alternators.)
" Oh, come on Bob, just what other setup that I'd be doing is there, that could be confused with "Bruce's Latest" at this point in time? "wcorey wrote: Preliminary results of Bruce's Latest are a bit underwhelming but not entirely unexpected...DCT-Bob wrote:____ Exactly what test are these results concerning ?
____ Well Bill, even though that's what I would've expected (eventually some time down the road), at the time when I discovered your results, I thought perhaps I had missed some other newer-postings since new pages were popping-up so often that day, AND, your posted test-outcome figure-results were way-off from that which would've been expected from the hoped-for "grand" / 'straight' series-arrangement !!
" I've decided to use 'Grand series' for now but still don't think it's self-explanatory/descriptive enough. "
____ Right Bill, I agree with your notion. ...
So I believe that Mike's term 'straight series' is really best cuz the intended straight-series winding stays straightly wound in just a forward-only fashion,, whereas the two Ducati-wound windings (put into series by the common/simple way), are 'U-turned' back along-side one another.
(I hope to provide a pic.drawing to depict the exact difference which I'm meaning to indicate/convey.)
wcorey wrote:DCT-Bob wrote:__ How about a 10-ohm load test, Bill ?
A ten ohm test of what/which? lol.
" 10 ohm, 21vdc, 44w "
____ It's now been reviewed that the indicated 'impedance' of the latest series-winding arrangement -(whatever it actually might be), is somewhere between 6 & 10 ohms.
(Bruce, take-note that the progression which you had pointed-out for the "series setup" is reversing [somewhere less than 10-ohms].)
"
Could very well be but if the inner/outer order isn't an issue then I don't know what’s off, "DCT-Bob wrote:...then something is certainly wrong !
____ I'd guess that the two separate stator-windings are STILL (at least partially) in a non-straight arrangement (of some sort). _ Cuz for ONE thing, I expected to see about 80-watts with the 3-ohm load.
" someone please enlighten me with a concise pictorial layout. As far I can see there are only two ways to do it and each is more or less equal in result. "
____ That sorta-seems like it could be expected, without a more notable alteration. ...
If you can't turn every-other spool 180-around on it's core-finger/lug, then perhaps short jumper-connections need to be done for half the coil-winding lead-ends (so that they'll be able to reach the actual connections where they need to be made).
I don't know for sure if such is really required, but if you've already tried all the easier reconnection possibilities, then my alternate concept is likely valid.
If you look at Mike's (nice!) drawing, it's obvious that half the pig-tails -(coil lead-ends) need to be fairly longer.
" I disconnected/separated all wires on the stator and rang out/mapped out the individual (two wire) winding sets. If you picture each spool with four wires in a row (coming out of holes in the bottom of the spool flange), numbered 1 through 4, the one consistent thing is that the wire pair layout of the first individual winding set is 1-3 and the other 2-4 (with the exception of the two smaller spools where two ‘end’ wires come out of the same hole). I found no obvious way to discern inner from outer winding sets. "
___ That's all quite-understandable, and makes it fairly-clear that the only way to trust that all coil-winding pairs are coherently passing current in the proper-order/direction,, is to fully employ the North/South-field effect method.
" I skipped a few steps and then tried what seemed like the most obvious scheme, connecting 2-3 together on each spool but when powered up produced no magnetic attraction at the pole. "
____ That indicates that the two coil-windings were passing current in OPPOSITE directions, which is just the occurrence which you DON'T want ! _ Meaning that either '2' or '3' needs to be connected to either '1' OR '4' , (and either '1' or '4' is the same coil-winding [thus the wrong pig-tail]).
" Next try was connecting 3-4, which did produce magnetic attraction, then 1-2 which also worked and also kept the same polarity. Using this scheme, starting with positive dc input on the first large coil, the polarities were north on all three smaller spools and south on two of the larger but north on the (first large) one that the output wires normally attach to. "
____ It seems likely then, that the coil-spools sent to you were from a different generation of 6-pole stators.
" The physical layout was easier using 3-4 connected so I soldered all of those together, then 2 on one spool to 1 on the next, with the one odd large spool reversed. When the whole stator was powered up the compass needle alternated concisely from north to south as it was passed by each pole. The magnetic attraction to a metal object to each pole seemed to have consistent force. "
____ Sure seems like all that would've likely achieved that which was desired then !
" I tested it full wave with the usual sequence of loads and posted the somewhat abbreviated results... "
____ Unfortunately, those results indicate that SOMETHING is not as it would be expected to be.
__ You mentioned also doing half-wave tests as well...
Were all their figure-results accordingly exactly half of what you got with your full-wave tests?
Hopeful-Cheers,
-Bob