View Single Post
Old
  (#9)
skellyo
RC-Monster Brushless
 
skellyo's Avatar
 
Offline
Posts: 2,466
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Florida
06.03.2008, 07:41 PM

Quote:
Originally Posted by VintageMA View Post
To follow up on what suicideneil said - if you let it the motor will pull as many amps as needed for the demand and blow itself up in the process if you let it. There is nothing to "limit" the current.

Like he said for Neu - the max amps is the amount of current the motor can handle for 30 seconds and the max rated voltage.

For example (and this doesn't correlate to any specific motor):

Rating: 3000 watts max for 30 seconds, max voltage 30 volts - max amps = 3000/30 = 100 Amps for 30 seconds.

A few scenarios running with lipo packs:

4S = 14.8 volts; 3000 / 14.8 = 202.7 Amps @ 30 sec.
5S = 18.5 volts; 3000 / 18.5 = 162.2 Amps @ 30 sec.
6S = 22.2 volts; 3000 / 22.2 = 135.1 Amps @ 30 sec.

It's really just a measure of heat dissipation, power and the max RPMs of the motor (to calculate the max voltage a motor can handle)
Your numbers aren't really true. The max power rating of the motor is based on a specific input voltage. The current does not increase with a lower voltage to achieve the same power as the motor is not a constant power device.
   
Reply With Quote