Overclocking is when a component is made to go faster than its designed speed in order to get a higher output or a better response or reaction from it. It is used for a vehicle in order to give a higher power output.
yes . A change of motor would be required. The motor windings would have to be totally different. three hot leads instead of two. And three phase would have to come from your provider.
The brush-less motor controller has a smaller output current than one DC motor. The brushless also has less of a output voltage. The maximum output voltage is 50V, where a regular DC motor would have a maximum of atleast 60V.
induction motor is AC motor also synchronic motors are AC motors but second one has not slip but first one has slip . shut motor is DC motor
you would have to put some type of resistor in the circuit with the motor...the resistor would have to be in series with the motor and would have to be of a high enough value to lower the voltage by 9 volts....There is a formula for working this out but you would need the amperage of the motor to figure this....
An induction motor rotating at higher than synchronous speed would be generating power, thus would be a generator. No motor operating as a motor runs above synchronous speed.
If you have a fast processor and want it to go faster you should give it a try but i personally would not risk a new fast processor. with the slower one it may become a little bit faster with overclocking but only if it is capable. by fast you might mean new, it is usually easier to overclock with a newer processor because they usually have new features that make it easier to let you overclock. happy tweaking!
You can overclock it, bit you can't put a new board in. If it's one of the older Macs that used the motorola processors (g4, g5, etc), overclocking will require some soldering and other hardware mods. If it's an intel Mac, there are apps that will allow you to overclock.
The OC one will provide slightly better performance at increased cost. both coolers on the cards are similar in performance and heat production is similar. Personally, I would get the non overclocked one and overclock it myself. there are many guides online of how to do this. even if you dont overclock it, the performance decrease will be minimal from the overclocked one
No, you cannot effectively overclock an i5 2500K processor using an H61H2-M2 motherboard, as that motherboard does not support overclocking features. The H61 chipset is designed primarily for non-overclockable CPUs, while the i5 2500K is unlocked for overclocking when paired with a compatible motherboard, typically one with a Z68, Z77, or newer chipset. To overclock the i5 2500K, you would need to upgrade to a motherboard that supports overclocking features.
Install a larger heatsink and fan.
The correct configuration management process to overclock your processor is going into the BIOS settings, and increasing the power of the motherboard. This is the safest way as well to overclock.
You can't "update" it, but you can overclock it. Overclocking is just running a component harder than it was made to. You might need to upgrade your power supply or fan depending on how much you overclock the card. http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/overclock-graphics-card,1916.html
no
yes, you can
Its your linkage, not your motor.
You need an overclocking program to overclock your video card. I use RivaTuner for my 8800GTS and I haven't had any problems. Remember that overclocking will ruin your warranty.
Overclock it.