Steampunk Brushless Motor Demo Pushes All the Maker Buttons

Weā€™ll be honest right up front: thereā€™s nothing new in [David Cambridge]ā€™s brushless motor and controller build. If youā€™re looking for earth-shattering innovation, youā€™d best look elsewhere. But if you enjoy an aimless use of just about every technique and material in the hackerā€™s toolkit employed with extreme craftsmanship, then this might be for you. And Nixies ā€” heā€™s got Nixies in there too.

[David]ā€™s build started out as a personal exploration of brushless motors and how they work. Some 3D-printed parts, a single coil of wire, and a magnetic reed switch resulted in a simple pulse motor that performed surprisingly well. This morphed into a six-coil motor with Hall-effect sensors and a homebrew controller. This is where [David] pulled out all the stops on tools ā€” a lathe, a plasma cutter, a welder, a milling machine, and a nice selection of woodworking tools went into making parts for the final motor as well as an enclosure for the project. And because he hadnā€™t checked off quite all the boxes yet, [David] decided to use the 3D-printed frame as a pattern for casting one from aluminum.

The finished motor, with a redesigned rotor to deal better with eddy currents, joined the wood and metal enclosure along with a Nixie tube tachometer and etched brass control plates. Itā€™s a great look for a project thatā€™s clearly a labor of self-edification and skill-building, and we love it. Weā€™ve seen other BLDC demonstrators before, but few that look as good as this one does.



from Blog ā€“ Hackaday https://ift.tt/3chU5zo

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