The stator is located at the outer part of an electric motor. It consists of stationary windings or permanent magnets and surrounds the rotor, which is the rotating part of the motor. The stator generates a magnetic field when electrical current flows through it, enabling the rotor to turn and produce mechanical energy.
An electric motor has a stator and a rotor. The stator does not move. The rotor rotates inside the stator.
A field of wheat
Main parts such as rotor and stator.
The electric motor in which the rotor and stator fields rotate simultaneously is called a "synchronous motor." In synchronous motors, the rotor is designed to rotate in synchrony with the rotating magnetic field produced by the stator. This type of motor is commonly used in applications requiring precise speed control and efficiency.
i have never heard of a commentator in a motor, think you may be mistaking that word. inside an electric motor you have a stator and windings, as polarity changes it spins the stator and the brushes transfer the charge to the device being used.. I think they meant commutator. If you break an electric motor down to 2 parts, you have a commutator and an armature. the armature being the shaft that basically floats on bearings, and the commutator being the hull where the stator is. (and there is such thing as a brushless electric motor.) the stator does not spin. that is the term used for the magnets that pull the electric field supplied by the brushes. To make even more simple, imagine a shaft floating on bearings with 2 magnets on it, one positive and one negative ( the armature) and this shaft is inside of a ring of electricity the is flowing in one direction, its going to pull the negative and push the positive (the commutator) and cause the armature to spin.
An electric motor has a stator and a rotor. The stator does not move. The rotor rotates inside the stator.
stator
A field of wheat
A stator can be found in electric motors, generators and alternators.
A stator is a part found in an electric motor. It can be part of the electrical system on a motor bike or on a siren such as is used for warnings by Civil Defence.
The "rotor" rotates. The "stator" is stationary.
Main parts such as rotor and stator.
A stator magnet is a permanent magnet located on the stationary part of an electric motor or generator. It produces a magnetic field that interacts with the rotating part (rotor) to generate mechanical motion or electrical power. Stator magnets play a crucial role in converting electrical energy into mechanical or vice versa in various applications.
Yes. Usually two - called rotor and stator.
The electric motor in which the rotor and stator fields rotate simultaneously is called a "synchronous motor." In synchronous motors, the rotor is designed to rotate in synchrony with the rotating magnetic field produced by the stator. This type of motor is commonly used in applications requiring precise speed control and efficiency.
only synchronous motor
A stator is the stationary part of an electric motor. The stator contains the windings in which the electrical source is connected to. The rotar is the core and shaft that rotates when electricity is applied to the stator