You need a DC power supply in order to connect a 24v DC motor to household power.
Hooking a 24V motor to a 110V source is a certain way of destroying the motor. It'll pull as many amps through its poor circuitry as the source can deliver until either the source's fuse or the motor blows.
That sounds quite good since the main winding should be insulated from the case. 10Mohm is a very large resistance it is well within normal range of the motor.
It depends. The 2A current, did you measure that while the soldering iron was on? Or is it rated at 2A current consumption on the device itself (on the powercable or the stem of the soldering iron). Generaly speaking you can calculted the real power consumption by using P=V*I (thus 2A*24V = 48W). But do remeber that this power consumption is in the steady state, that is, after its switch on and all transient effects have died down. To be safe allow for 3A-4A switching currents that occurs at power on.
A direct on line starter, often abbreviated DOL starter, is a widely-used starting method of electric motors. The term is used in electrical engineering and associated with electric motors. There are many types of motor starters, the simplest of which is the DOL starter. A motor starter is an electrical/electronic circuit composed of electro-mechanical and electronic devices which are employed to start and stop an electric motor. Regardless of the motor type (AC or DC), the types of starters differ depending on the method of starting the motor. A DOL starter connects the motor terminals directly to the power supply. Hence, the motor is subjected to the full voltage of the power supply. Consequently, high starting current flows through the motor. This type of starting is suitable for small motors below 5 hp (3.75 kW). Reduced-voltage starters are employed with motors above 5 hp. Although DOL motor starters are available for motors less than 150 kW on 400 V and for motors less than 1 MW on 6.6 kV. Supply reliability and reserve power generation dictates the use of reduced voltage or not. A very well-known motor starter is the DOL Starter of a 3-Phase Squirrel-Cage Motor. This starter is sometimes used to start water pumps, compressors, fans and conveyor belts. With a 400V, 50 Hz, 3-phase supply, the power circuit connects the motor to 400V. Consequently, the starting current may reach 3-8 times the normal current. The control circuit is typically run at 24V with the aid of a 400V/24V transformer
Use a fuse
You don't. 2 12v panels together don't make 24v - doesn't work that way. If you need 24v you need to get 24v panels.
Yes, connect them in series.
Wire the batteries in "series". Place jumper from neg (-) terminal to the pos (+) terminal on the other battery. You will have 24V across the remaining terminals.
The transformer itself does not pull current. Whatever you connect to the transformer pulls current. Whatever the output voltage of the transformer is, divide that into 600 and you get maximum current possible without burning up the transformer. At 24V that's 25 amps.
You are confusing terms. Current is measured in amps or some fraction thereof. If you have a 24 volt battery (All batteries are DC) you need to connect a load to the battery and then measure the current that flows in the circuit. The current is measured in amps, milliamps or perhaps microamps for a very high resistance load.
Connect the 12V winch to one battery, assuming the 24V system has two batteries, connected in series.
With the two batteries side by side connect a jumper wire from the positive post on one battery to the negative post on the other. The remaining neg and pos posts on each battery will supply the 24V your looking for.
for automotive purposes, you will need two 12 volts batteries connected in SERIES. That is, connect the two batteries with one cable from positive to negative. That will give you 24 volts. In order to charge both batteries with one alternator, you will need a battery equalizer
Please go to discuss question page.
An electric scooter of all types use an electric motor powered by a battery(s) I have a 3wheel scooter and a 4 wheel power chair, both for medical use and use 2 - 12v Lead acid batteries in series to produce 24v DC which runs the 24v motor.
No its not. Its for 24v security cameras.
You can change the motor from the stock 24v-250 watt motor to a 24v-350 watt motor with a 150 more RPM's and more torque, than change out the front sprocket from the stock 11 tooth to a 13 or 15 tooth that will get you up to 19 to 22 mph depending on your weight. The motor will run you any where from $35 to $55 and the sprocket runs $6 to $15, there a cheap way to get some speed out of you E300-E325