Yes. A motor is considered to be a load of the power supply in use.
No load speed is the speed that the motor run when it has no load, i.e., the motor is separated from the engine, that speed is than greater than the rated speed, because the rated speed is the speed whwn the motor are linked to the load and it is the full load.
Full load starting current is typically in the region of 5or 6 times the full load motor current;.
If transformer then it refers to that, the primary is charged, but secondary is open, (no load is connected) If motor, it refers to that no load is connected to motor, the shaft is decoupled from the load, but running with out any load.
A shunt motor isn't literally constant-speed; its speed does fall between no load and full load. If you plot a graph of speed against load, you will find that the speed falls by around 10% or so. Compared with other d.c. motors, this fall is considered to be insignificant -hence the term, 'constant speed'.We apply a similar term to transformers, when we describe them as being 'constant voltage' machines. They're not literally 'constant voltage', but their regulation (difference between full-load and no-load voltage), is considered to be insignificant.
heavy load
To connect mechanical load to a motor, you couple it to the shaft of the motor.
No load speed is the speed that the motor run when it has no load, i.e., the motor is separated from the engine, that speed is than greater than the rated speed, because the rated speed is the speed whwn the motor are linked to the load and it is the full load.
Full load starting current is typically in the region of 5or 6 times the full load motor current;.
A motor does not provide energy. It converts electrical energy to mechanical energy. From a circuit standpoint, the motor is considered a load (similar to a resistor). Resistors convert electrical energy to heat energy.
Generally a motor drives some equipment, it could be a fan, or a pump, connected to motor's shaft. The speed of the motor when no equipment is connected to its shaft is known as no load speed.
If transformer then it refers to that, the primary is charged, but secondary is open, (no load is connected) If motor, it refers to that no load is connected to motor, the shaft is decoupled from the load, but running with out any load.
Full load amps is the maximum rated amps that the motor should draw according to its nameplate rating. Running load amps is the actual amperage the motor is drawing at that point in time when the test is taken. Some motor loads vary depending on if the load is cyclic. The reading on this type of motor would be from no load amps to full load amps.
No it is not considered a load. A load transforms electrical energy into other types of energy :)
A shunt motor isn't literally constant-speed; its speed does fall between no load and full load. If you plot a graph of speed against load, you will find that the speed falls by around 10% or so. Compared with other d.c. motors, this fall is considered to be insignificant -hence the term, 'constant speed'.We apply a similar term to transformers, when we describe them as being 'constant voltage' machines. They're not literally 'constant voltage', but their regulation (difference between full-load and no-load voltage), is considered to be insignificant.
A motor in a circuit is classed as the circuit's load.
DC Series motor should never run without load connected to it because starting torque for DC series motor is infinite and running it on no load will damage the motor due to overspeeding.
heavy load