Every stepper motor has a stator and rotor, effectively like any other electric motor. Their unique feature is the segmented nature of the stator, forming what are commonly referred to as ‘teeth’.
We like the idea of using the same material throughout the motor, and it also raises the potential for stacking a second stator on the other side of the rotor, which might help mechanically and ...
“Pancake” style axial-flux motors sandwich a disclike permanent-magnet rotor between stator discs. Orbis’ version is tunable in two ways: For the strongest, skinniest setup ...
Electric motors can seem very mysterious! How do they use electricity to start rotating? Let's break it down step by step to understand how it works. Topics covered in this video: circuits, current, ...
Evolito uses a yokeless axial flux design with two rotor plates on the outside of its stator While axial flux configurations date back to Michael Faraday's very first electric motor from 1821 ...
For those written in the last week, our most read stories on the site cover a frame-less brush-less dc motor, the value of ...
A ring of power: The operation of the Axial Flux Motor According to Lammotor, the dual-rotor, single-stator design of YASA’s electric motor facilitates automated mass production and streamlines ...