Building an
electric motor will take time, effort, money, and no shortage of luck when its
all said and done but the payoff can be worth it. For me, I ran into man many
problems in the course of building my motor but eventually I got it up and
running even if it was not as fast as I would have liked.
What You Need to
Start Building:
·
Strap
iron 6” by 5/8” by 3/3n” (or 1/8” ).
·
100’
of #24 (must be 24) magnet wire
·
2
16-penny spikes
·
Tape
1” wide
·
Darning
needle or piece of a coat hanger
·
Copper-stand
lamp wire 2” long
·
Base
board 7” by 6” by 3/4”
·
4
screws and set of nails
·
1’
hookup wire
·
6
volt-battery
Once you have
gathered the necessary supplies budget for at least 3 more trips to Home Depot
because you will need a lot more than that to get this baby going.
Steps To
Building:
1.
Take
two 6” L brackets and place them in a U shape, with the bottoms overlapping to
create your coil
2.
Wrap
them in single stranded wire for the best result with one end of the wire
coming out on the right side and one on the left
3.
Tape
the coil to your baseboard
4.
Next
drill two L brackets to hold your metal rod in place
5.
Taking
your separate metal rod, create your armature by first taping two smaller metal
rods perpendicular to your larger one, and then wrap in magnet wire
6.
Next
create terminal by drilling a hole in a cork and sliding it onto your metal rod
7.
Wrap
the terminal in copper and connect magnet wire to the ends
8.
Next
set up 2 L brackets to create the brushes
9.
Use
any kind of wire as a brush and connect to the battery
10. Take other brush and connect to one end
of the coil
11. Take other end of the coil and connect to
the battery
Problems: For me
the first problem was drilling everything in place which took hours on hours.
Please note that nails are sometimes impossible and I would definitely advise
using a power drill and screwing in your brackets. Also get a larger baseboard
then needed becuase the more space you have the better. The biggest problem
though, was wrapping (and rewrapping) the magnet wire along with continuously
remodeling the positioning of the metal rod. Finally you may also encounter
problems as I did once everything is actually finished and see that the motor
does not even work. My only advice for this would be to budget time for
questions, research and more trial and error to get the motor up and running.
Here is my electric motor in action.
Here is my electric motor in action.