What you can do is either add more components or lessen the volts of the battery.
The most basic of electric motors consists of a permanent magnet and an electromagnet. This is not a requirement for all types of electric motors and most modern electric motors do not have permanent magnets. The stator and rotor are the two active elements of a simple electric motor and both have magnetic fields in the various types and designs of simple motors.
A choke, an electromagnet, an electric motor stator, an electric motor rotor, etc. all depending on details of construction and use that are unstated in the question.
An electric motor converts electricity into mecanical movement. The reverse us true. If you make a model which can rotate the spindle of an electric motor, electricity will flow out of the wires of the motor. The faster the spindle turns the more power you will get. Best to use a small motor designed for small batteries (for instance the sort found in remote control car kits). Anything designed for larger applications will have inbuilt circuits which prevent this working
dense
Lessen the angle of the plank.
electric energy to mechanical energy
In order for an electric motor to spin freely you will have to make sure you have one thing. You have to have the electric current for the motor to run freely.
You get lots of batteries and a huge, powerful electric motor
Yes. To make something move, you have to add energy. An electric motor won't turn by itself.
I made a tin can induction motor when I was a kid (probably 8 or 9 years old). I got the directions from a book, but you should be able to find something on the Internet.
The amount of an electric motor's copper depends upon the size of the motor and the supplies used to make it. Generally, the older the motor, the more copper will be present.
I assume you mean an electric car. As an electric motor uses magnets or magnetism to rotate
The amount of copper in a particular motor is not determined by horsepower only, there is no relationship between the total weight of MAGNET WIRE to the HORSEPOWER of an electric motor. Determining factors are the vintage, frame, make, speed, and frame designation.
Look for r/c cars on sale for about $60-100. Also, make sure that you can add a second electric motor. Buy the second electric motor, install it, and your r/c car should go anywhere from 40-70 mph.
Perhaps you have finally made the decision to change your car into an electric vehicle. If so, you are on the road to saving a hundred to two hundred dollars a week on gasoline. You will need to make certain preparations. First of all, you should be sure that you know how to change the motor in your car. You should buy a manual that explains how to do this for only $20 or $30.
No there is no purely electric cr out in 2012. We're still a while away.
if it is a capacitor start and run motor, this is because of shorted capacitor