In the circuit where the DC motor is added, it was not specified whether the motor was added in series or in parallel to circuit elements. If it was added in series, it will increase circuit resistance and it will cause circuit current to go down. In parallel, the motor will reduce total circuit resistance, and circuit current will increase.
No. A d.c. 'shunt' motor is one whose stator's field windings are connected in parallel with its rotor windings ('shunt' is simply an archic term for 'parallel'); it does not mean that the rotor can function without brushes.
In D.C Shunt motor, the field winding is connected parallel with the armature winding.. If you remove the supply to armature winding, the motor will stop after some time.
I've not heard the term "bressless" - I think you mean "Brushless" - which is a DC Motor that does not use the usual commutator/brush arrangement. For a great answer to this question, see the Wikipedia article in the related links section.
Hi, Always interpoles are connected in series with armature. N.V.B.V. Prasada Rao
A DC shunt motor is a motor using DC supply with the the inductor connected parallel to the armature.
A DC shunt motor is a motor using DC supply with the the inductor connected parallel to the armature.
A shunt DC motor connects the armature and field windings in parallel or shunt with a common D.C. power source. This type of motor has good speed regulation even as the load varies, but does not have the starting torque of a series DC motor
Shunt Motor
A DC series-parallel compound motor.
Series wound. Parallel wound. Series/parallel or Compound wound.
2
It means that the voltage that supplies the motor has to be a direct current source.
In the circuit where the DC motor is added, it was not specified whether the motor was added in series or in parallel to circuit elements. If it was added in series, it will increase circuit resistance and it will cause circuit current to go down. In parallel, the motor will reduce total circuit resistance, and circuit current will increase.
Emf generated=(flux*no.of parallel poles*no.of conductors*speed)/(60*no.of parallel paths) therefore, for lap wound.... no.of parallel path=no.of poles and wave wound ..... no of parallel path=2
DC motors are commonly used in cars and normally run on 12 v. DC motors can be broadly classified as series-wound and parallel-wound and for fans the parallel-wound version is used with the field winding placed in parallel with the armature (for domestic use AC fans using induction motors are normally used).
No. A d.c. 'shunt' motor is one whose stator's field windings are connected in parallel with its rotor windings ('shunt' is simply an archic term for 'parallel'); it does not mean that the rotor can function without brushes.