US547069A - Rotary field-motor - Google Patents

Rotary field-motor Download PDF

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US547069A
US547069A US547069DA US547069A US 547069 A US547069 A US 547069A US 547069D A US547069D A US 547069DA US 547069 A US547069 A US 547069A
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members
disk
ring
motor
lines
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02KDYNAMO-ELECTRIC MACHINES
    • H02K17/00Asynchronous induction motors; Asynchronous induction generators
    • H02K17/02Asynchronous induction motors
    • H02K17/34Cascade arrangement of an asynchronous motor with another dynamo-electric motor or converter
    • H02K17/36Cascade arrangement of an asynchronous motor with another dynamo-electric motor or converter with another asynchronous induction motor

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  • This my invention relates to polyphase machines in general, and more particularly to their regulation and to the construction and arrangement of the fixed members thereof.
  • the object of my invention is to so construct a polyphase ⁇ machine that an intense field or elds may be created and that such fields shall have uniform intensities.
  • This lI 4o accomplish, as is hereinafter set forth, by such an arrangement of the members as that the resulting lines of force are straight and that their length is very short.
  • a further object of my invention is to provide means for varying the intensity of the magnetic elds irrespective of the energizing-current or the position of the collectorbrushes, which object I attain by a relative shifting of the opposing-poles and a conse- 5o quent alteration of the lengths of the lines of ⁇ force of the'elds.
  • Figure 1 is a vertical section of a dynamo constructed in accordance with myinvention.
  • Fig. 2 is a side elevation of my dynamo and showing means for rotativeiy shifting the relative positions of the rings and also for retaining them in the desired mutual relation.
  • Fig. 3 is a diagrammatic representation of a winding' for rotary machines, for which I have made application for United States Letters Patent, Serial No. 412,123, and which winding I prefer to use in a motor as constructed in accordance with my present invention.
  • Fig. 4 is a view of, one form of copper disk used, which disk forms the revolving member of the machine.
  • Fig. 5 is asection of one of the fixed members, showing the laminal construction thereof and the position of the winding thereon.
  • Fig. 6 is a side elevation of a portion of the form of core which I prefer to use in the construction of the fixed members, said core having radial ribs forming recesses for the reception of the windings.
  • Fig. 6* is an edge elevation of a ring construction after the design shown in Fig. 6; and
  • Fig. 7 is a plan view of portions of the fixed members and the movable disk therebetween; showing their relative positions at times of greatest intensity of the tields.
  • A is a base -or supporting frame for the machine and is providedwith standards fg, provided with bearings p q, respectively, in their upper portions for the reception of a shaft fr, having secured thereto a revoluble member s, consisting of an enlarged rim, an interior disk, and a separable hub c', which latter is formed of two parts provided with internally-arranged anges u, located to clamp-the interior edge of the'disk, the said disk and hub members being held in their proper relations by means of suitable bolts or screws j passed therethrough.
  • the shaft r may be provided with a belt-wheel 'u orwith ⁇ any other suitable power-.transmitting means.
  • a and b represent two fixed members of myA machine similar in form and winding and each secured positively in any desired manner, such as by a key, to a collar c and d, reu
  • each or both of which collars may be provided with 4a peripheral or otherwise arranged rack e, for the purpose as shall be presently explained.
  • rack e peripheral or otherwise arranged rack
  • Each of the aforesaidmembers is preferably of laminal construction, the usual layers of which may be retained in position by means of bolts k passed therethrough in ra dial directions.
  • Figs. 6, 6a, and 7 I have shown a preferred form of core, which is of the usual ribbed type, the advantages of which are that the established poles may be brought nearertogether, whereby a consequent greater strength of' fields results, and that the accuracy of winding is facilitated and a less amount of wire is necessary.
  • the collars c and dand members thereto attached are. passed over shaft r from either end thereof previous to its location in the bearings in the standards.
  • each member a and h is provided with means for adjustably securing it in the desired position, which means may consist of a threaded bar h passed through a slot t' in the standard adjacent to a member and entering the collar thereto attached, said bar being providedwith an adjustable nut h', whereby it may be allowed to play in said slot upon the loosening of said nut, at which time its collar and member thereon may be given a desired degree of revolution.
  • Secured in the desired manner tothe external portion of each of the members a and l) is a bar l similar to bar 71. and arranged to play in a like manner thereto in the segmental slot o in a standard of the frame.
  • Extending from the standard g is an arm w, having bearings for the reception of the shaft provided with an operating handh wheel e on its exterior extremity, and having on its inner end a pinion y, arranged to mesh with the rack een the adjacent collar CZ.
  • a like arrangement maybe secured to the standard However, this is not necessary.
  • the object of this contrivance is to enable the revoluble shifting oi one member h relative to its opposing member a, which shifting is accomplished, as will be readily seen, by turning the hand-wheel a after the nuts on the bars h and Z have been loosened.
  • This I accomplish by gradually revolving one member h relatively toits opposing membercvJ in the manner hereinbeforc described, whereby the unlike opposing poles thereof are gradually separated, the lines of force are both lengthened and rendered 4oblique, and the intensities of the fields are consequently decreased.
  • the described arrangement of the/ ring members not only imparts to the machine the feature of being readily regulated, but such regulation can be most delicately and accurately accomplished, and ⁇ moreover, the maximum intensities of the fields is much greater than in other constructions, due to the fact that the lines of force thereof are both very short and are straight.

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Description

(No Model.) I z sheets-sheen 1.
J. H. F. GRGES.
ROTARY FIELD MOTOR.
No. 547,069. Patented? OOO. 1, 1895.
WHNES' MINI/EN R l BY. r
/ ATTORNEY (No Mvoel.) 2 sheetssheen 2. J. H. F. GRGES. ROTARY FIELD MOTOR.
No. 547,069. A Patented'Oct. 1, 1895. l
` ATTORNEY UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
BY MESNE ASSIGNMEMTIS, TO THE SIEMENS dt PANY OF AMERICA, OF CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.
IIALSKE ELECTRIC COM" ROTARY FIELD-MOTOR.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 547,069, dated October 1 1895. Application filed October 10, 1893. Serial No. 487,760. (No model.) Patented in Germany October 3, 1891,1I0. 65.056.
'To all whom it may concern.-
Be it. known that. I, JOHANNES HEINRICH FRIEDRICH GRGES, a subject of the Emperor of Germany, residing at Berlin, in the German Empire, have invented new and 'useful Improvements in Rotary Field-Motors, (for which I have obtained Letters Patent of Germany No. 65,056, dated October 8, 1891,) of which the following is a specification.
This my invention relates to polyphase machines in general, and more particularly to their regulation and to the construction and arrangement of the fixed members thereof.
Polyphase machines have been heretofore I5 constructed by locating a revolving member within a I ixed lmember of ring form, or vice versa, according to the peculiar application intended for the machine. In the first casethat is, where the revolving member is lozo cated Within a iixed ring memberthe objection is noted that the lines of force, as created by the coils on the ring, do not, if the ring'is of sutiicient size,'traverse the whole diameter ofthe ring-that is, from pole to pole-with the result that a comparatively weak field is formed, and the maximum efficiency of the machine is not secured. In the second casethat is, where the ring is the revolving member-the lines of force tend, as is well known, 3o to describe curves from their respective poles. Here, also, asin the case above mentioned, an intense magnetic eld cannot be attained, for the reason that the greater the curvature of the lines of force the greater'their length, 3 5 and consequently the less their' strength.
The object of my invention is to so construct a polyphase` machine that an intense field or elds may be created and that such fields shall have uniform intensities. This lI 4o accomplish, as is hereinafter set forth, by such an arrangement of the members as that the resulting lines of force are straight and that their length is very short. A further object of my invention is to provide means for varying the intensity of the magnetic elds irrespective of the energizing-current or the position of the collectorbrushes, which object I attain by a relative shifting of the opposing-poles and a conse- 5o quent alteration of the lengths of the lines of `force of the'elds.
In the accompanying drawings, forming a part of this specification, and in which like letters relate to similar parts in the several views, Figure 1 is a vertical section of a dynamo constructed in accordance with myinvention. Fig. 2 is a side elevation of my dynamo and showing means for rotativeiy shifting the relative positions of the rings and also for retaining them in the desired mutual relation. Fig. 3 is a diagrammatic representation of a winding' for rotary machines, for which I have made application for United States Letters Patent, Serial No. 412,123, and which winding I prefer to use in a motor as constructed in accordance with my present invention. Fig. 4 is a view of, one form of copper disk used, which disk forms the revolving member of the machine. Fig. 5 is asection of one of the fixed members, showing the laminal construction thereof and the position of the winding thereon. Fig. 6 is a side elevation of a portion of the form of core which I prefer to use in the construction of the fixed members, said core having radial ribs forming recesses for the reception of the windings. Fig. 6* is an edge elevation of a ring construction after the design shown in Fig. 6; and Fig. 7 is a plan view of portions of the fixed members and the movable disk therebetween; showing their relative positions at times of greatest intensity of the tields.
k Referring now to the drawings, A is a base -or supporting frame for the machine and is providedwith standards fg, provided with bearings p q, respectively, in their upper portions for the reception of a shaft fr, having secured thereto a revoluble member s, consisting of an enlarged rim, an interior disk, and a separable hub c', which latter is formed of two parts provided with internally-arranged anges u, located to clamp-the interior edge of the'disk, the said disk and hub members being held in their proper relations by means of suitable bolts or screws j passed therethrough. The shaft r may be provided with a belt-wheel 'u orwith` any other suitable power-.transmitting means.
a and b represent two fixed members of myA machine similar in form and winding and each secured positively in any desired manner, such as by a key, to a collar c and d, reu
IOO
spectively, each or both of which collars may be provided with 4a peripheral or otherwise arranged rack e, for the purpose as shall be presently explained. In Fig. l of the drawvings I have shown such rack formed only in the collar ci.l
Each of the aforesaidmembers is preferably of laminal construction, the usual layers of which may be retained in position by means of bolts k passed therethrough in ra dial directions. I l
In Figs. 6, 6a, and 7 I have shown a preferred form of core, which is of the usual ribbed type, the advantages of which are that the established poles may be brought nearertogether, whereby a consequent greater strength of' fields results, and that the accuracy of winding is facilitated and a less amount of wire is necessary.
The collars c and dand members thereto attached are. passed over shaft r from either end thereof previous to its location in the bearings in the standards.
-Each member a and h is provided with means for adjustably securing it in the desired position, which means may consist of a threaded bar h passed through a slot t' in the standard adjacent to a member and entering the collar thereto attached, said bar being providedwith an adjustable nut h', whereby it may be allowed to play in said slot upon the loosening of said nut, at which time its collar and member thereon may be given a desired degree of revolution. Secured in the desired manner tothe external portion of each of the members a and l) is a bar l similar to bar 71. and arranged to play in a like manner thereto in the segmental slot o in a standard of the frame. By the use of the second bar steadiness and positiveness are given to the member in its altered posities.
Extending from the standard g is an arm w, having bearings for the reception of the shaft provided with an operating handh wheel e on its exterior extremity, and having on its inner end a pinion y, arranged to mesh with the rack een the adjacent collar CZ. As hereinbefore intimated, a like arrangement maybe secured to the standard However, this is not necessary. The object of this contrivance is to enable the revoluble shifting oi one member h relative to its opposing member a, which shifting is accomplished, as will be readily seen, by turning the hand-wheel a after the nuts on the bars h and Z have been loosened.
In Figs. l and 7 of the drawings I have shown the relative juxtapositions of the fixed and revolving members, and it will be noted that they lie very closely together, and herein lies one of the features of my invention, as it is evident that the closer the opposing poles the shorter the lines of force, and, under the inn fluence of a current of constant intensity, the greater the strength thereof. Moreover, it will be noted that as one ring is shifted relative to the other the lines of force of the fields are not only increased in length but are given an oblique direction, which Obliquity is increased as the opposing poles are moved farther apart. Thus a slight shift is alone necessary to accomplish a considerable alteration in'the intensity'ofithe ields,-\vhich alteration in this casev is notonly proportional to the square of the distance, but also also bears a relation to the angle of Obliquity.
Having now described my invention, its operation isa's follows: Rotary current being fed to the windings of the fixed members and the member h being revolved to such an extent that its poles are directly opposite the unlike poles of the opposing member a, the disk s will be caused to revolve with its maximum speed, and energy will be developed, due to 'the rotary impulses imparted to the disk by the current generated therein. Should, however, the intensityof the lines of force be decreased by any'means whatsoever, a corresponding decrease in the efficiency of the machine will result in proportion to the said va riance. This I accomplish by gradually revolving one member h relatively toits opposing membercvJ in the manner hereinbeforc described, whereby the unlike opposing poles thereof are gradually separated, the lines of force are both lengthened and rendered 4oblique, and the intensities of the fields are consequently decreased. The described arrangement of the/ ring members not only imparts to the machine the feature of being readily regulated, but such regulation can be most delicately and accurately accomplished, and` moreover, the maximum intensities of the fields is much greater than in other constructions, due to the fact that the lines of force thereof are both very short and are straight.
I do not limit myself to any particular means for shifting the members nor to the peculiar construction of the disk used, which latter may be formed with radial spokes, as is shown in Fig. 4 of the drawings, or it may be made solid. Its composition may also be changed at will, and I -may employ instead. of a copper disk one of iron-with a copper hub and rim. Moreover, I may so arrange the elcments of my machine that the disk will remain stationary while the rings will rotate, and, if desired, I may regulate the operation thereof by a change of connections.
It is evident that the principles involved in this my invention may be applied to a dynamo as well as to a motor, it being only necessary in the former instance that contactbrushes be arranged to bear upon the disk at its periphery and center to secure a current according to the laws covering the well-known disk machine.
Having now described my invention, its constructions, and methods of operation, what I claim is I. The combination. with two ring members placed face to faceand provided with pluriphase windings -to produce a rotating magnetic field in the space between the ring mehr IOO IIO
ige
bers, of a rotatable member situated in the space between said ring members adapted to be rotated by said field; substantially as described.
5 2. The combination with two ring members placed face to face and provided With pluripbase windings to produce a rotating magnetic tield in the space between the ring members, of a rotatable member situated in the 1o space between said ring members and adapted to be rotated by said field, and means for rotating said ring members relatively to vary the strength of the rotating eld; substantially as described. l
In testimony whereof I afx my signature I5 in the presence of two witnesses.
JOHANNES HEINRICH FRIEDRICH GORGES. Witnesses:
GEO. I-I. CHANDLEE, C. S. OAAMPION.
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Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2857534A (en) * 1954-07-06 1958-10-21 Sperry Rand Corp Combination electric motor and gyroscopic structures
US3223867A (en) * 1961-10-09 1965-12-14 Gen Dynamics Corp Axial air gap motor
US3294997A (en) * 1962-10-06 1966-12-27 Gen Dynamics Corp Axial air gap motor
US3333124A (en) * 1964-09-29 1967-07-25 Skinner Prec Ind Inc Induction motor
US3529191A (en) * 1967-03-28 1970-09-15 Photocircuits Corp Homopolar machine having disklike rotor
US3767330A (en) * 1970-08-28 1973-10-23 Marelli & C Spa Ercole Electric hot water circulating pump with motor having an axial air gap
US3889140A (en) * 1968-08-31 1975-06-10 Max Baermann Fa Induction brake or clutch
US3991819A (en) * 1973-04-11 1976-11-16 Sealed Motor Construction Co. Ltd. Air conditioning device
US5278470A (en) * 1990-07-06 1994-01-11 Neag Zacharias J Homopolar machine which acts as a direct current (DC) high voltage generator or motor

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2857534A (en) * 1954-07-06 1958-10-21 Sperry Rand Corp Combination electric motor and gyroscopic structures
US3223867A (en) * 1961-10-09 1965-12-14 Gen Dynamics Corp Axial air gap motor
US3294997A (en) * 1962-10-06 1966-12-27 Gen Dynamics Corp Axial air gap motor
US3333124A (en) * 1964-09-29 1967-07-25 Skinner Prec Ind Inc Induction motor
US3529191A (en) * 1967-03-28 1970-09-15 Photocircuits Corp Homopolar machine having disklike rotor
US3889140A (en) * 1968-08-31 1975-06-10 Max Baermann Fa Induction brake or clutch
US3767330A (en) * 1970-08-28 1973-10-23 Marelli & C Spa Ercole Electric hot water circulating pump with motor having an axial air gap
US3991819A (en) * 1973-04-11 1976-11-16 Sealed Motor Construction Co. Ltd. Air conditioning device
US5278470A (en) * 1990-07-06 1994-01-11 Neag Zacharias J Homopolar machine which acts as a direct current (DC) high voltage generator or motor

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