Uncle!
My gut feel is that the shading, since it more or less fills its space and
has no room to move would not be a problem, and the weights on a single
phase motor, assuming we used this starting method instead of an external
switch like hermetics use, could probably be accommodated, though I'd be
more comfortable not using the centrifigal switch.......but the upshot of it
is that this is really not necessary. A second compressor is probably the
superior way to go about it.
I believe that with careful choice of pulley sizes that the electric motor
driving the single compressor concept could be made to work without problem,
But I also think that the hermetic, if we can solve the oiling problem, is
far superior, if only because it will be quieter, easier to mount, and more
reliable. An open motor driving a second A-6 would possibly be an acceptable
compromise, but I don't see it as the ultimate solution as it will require
more room, a less reliable drive system, more complicated mounting, etc. But
even with all that, if that were the only way this could be done, it would
still be a big improvement over the roof units.
So keep thinking and brainstorming. I've gotten to know Arch well enough by
reading his posts for a few months to think he will agree that all this
second guessing and trying to anticipate the problems before they occur will
improve the end result. I know I'd rather have the pitfalls pointed out
before starting the voyage. But it is still worthwhile to attempt.
Possibly the best bet is to see if one of the group can "breadboard" this
project without making modifications to anyone's coach until the basics can
be settled. Any ideas on this? Might be easier to just try it on a coach; I
don't know. We have a volunteer "guinea pig" at least.
The pioneers are the guys with the arrows in their backs, but they're also
the winners a lot of the times too.
Like I said, keep thinking...this one is worth pursuing.
Travis
- -----Original Message-----
From: Mark Grady
To: gmcmotorhome
Date: Friday, April 23, 1999 11:46 PM
Subject: RE: GMC: A.C. Compressor (trivia)
>I know almost nothing about this topic, so I'll ask these questions:
>
>Would the quality of the balance for an armature that normally
>operates at 1750 (or even 3600) be adequate at 8000?
>
>[It's not real, real close, but I can tell you that you can't start a gas
>turbine engine with a hydraulic motor.]
>
>Would the centrifugal weights on the start switch inside the motor
withstand
>the increased speed (assuming a single phase motor here) without self
>destructing?
>
>Would the shading (which provides reluctance) in the armature affect its
>ability to withstand the increased centrifugal forces of 4.5 to 2.6 times
>over speed?
>
>Since we need a fairly high HP motor to drive the compressor, (2HP ?) does
>the increased mass of this size motor pose a safety risk if it self
>destructs?
>
>As an alternative, how about just driving another A-6 with the electric
>motor?
>They're cheap, and the oil distribution problem is solved since they have
>identical
>characteristics. The internals (reed valves, etc.) would easily withstand
>the pressure.
>
>You also get to size your drive and driven pulleys to their optimum speed.
>There are different A-6 pulleys, with different weight inertia rings.
>
>Just thinking out loud.
>
>Mark
>
>
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: owner-gmcmotorhome
>> [mailto

wner-gmcmotorhome]On Behalf Of Travis Martin
>> Sent: Friday, April 23, 1999 11:09 PM
>> To: gmcmotorhome
>> Subject: Re: GMC: A.C. Compressor (trivia)
>>
>>
>> Hi, Arch,
>>
>> I understand your concern, but I don't think that _in this particular
>> instance_ it is valid....only because the rated speed of the motor has
>> nothing at all to do with its physical limitations; it is only the
>> relationship between the number of poles and line frequency. The
>> same motor
>> could have been built to run at 3600.
>>
>> With a gasoline engine, higher rpm means more horsepower. The
>> limit becomes
>> the physical capability of the components to stay together. That's why my
>> rich friend's 12 cylinder ferrari makes 440 horsepower on 5 liters of
>> displacement...at 8500 rpm.
>>
>> With an electric motor, maximum torque is at zero rpm. There are no
>> reciprocating parts, and the only moving part is a solid
>> armature. It would
>> likely handle 20,000 RPM indefinitely if you asked it to; I can't think
of
>> any reason why it shouldn't. Like I say, the nameplate RPM on the motor
is
>> not a design limitation...it's just the speed that will occur at
>> 60 cps line
>> frequency. Actually, the theoretical speed is 1800 rpm...the 1725 is a
>> nominal speed factoring in some normal slip. In actual practice, it will
>> vary with the load on the motor.
>>
>> Hope you understand that I'm not trying to quarrel; I just think your
>> concern is not warranted in this one area. I, too, would want to
>> err on the
>> side of reliability, but don't think that this is even a minor issue
here.
>> Ordinarilly, I'd be concerned about turning something several times its
>> normal speed, but I believe that the only limiting factor on the
induction
>> motor will be its bearings.
>>
>> Also, per your earlier observation, we should aim for a higer speed on
the
>> compressor from the motor, so instead of a 1:1 ration from the
>> motor to the
>> compressor we'll likely need something like 1:1.5
>> This will have the side benefit of alleviating some of your concern,
since
>> overdriving the compressor will mean underdriving the electric motor when
>> the 455 is running the compressor.
>>
>> I really think this idea needs pursuing. This would be a genuine
>> improvement
>> on the design of the coach.
>>
>> Travis
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Gcbr
>> To: gmcmotorhome
>> Date: Friday, April 23, 1999 10:50 PM
>> Subject: Re: GMC: A.C. Compressor (trivia)
>>
>>
>> >Travis
>> >
>> >I am not worried about cycling the compressor. I am worried about
driving
>> >an electric motor that is designed to go 1725 rpm at 4000 or 8000 rpm.
>> >It aint cool! bronze bearings are not designed for that. Even if it has
>> ball
>> >bearing you are so far over design standards that all hell could
>> break out
>> at
>> >any time. If you had an electric clutch then it would not be turning
when
>> the
>> >455 is driving it. I am going out of bounds here but here I go. You can
>> push
>> >the limits---------yes you can. You cant take a motor that was
>> designed to
>> run
>> >at 1725 and run it at 8000 rpm. I will promise you something
>> will fail that
>> >far out of limits. Yes, I know I am sounding like Wes again.
>> Sorry but not
>> >sorry.
>> >
>> >Take Care
>> >Arch
>> >
>> >In a message dated 4/23/99 10:14:59 PM Central Daylight Time,
>> >
>> >>
>> >> But it means we don't have to worry about cycling the
>> compressor and so
>> a
>> >> clutch on the electric motor is back to being unnecessary.
>> >>
>> >> Or that's the current state of my cortexical flatulence.
>> >>
>> >> Ideas?
>> >>
>> >
>> >
>>
>