A palindrome for a part of a motor that turns or rotates is a rotor.
The word rotor is used to refer to a rotating part of a machine. It is also a palindrome.
The part that rotates inside of an electric motor is called the rotor.
The "rotor" rotates. The "stator" is stationary.
The part that rotates inside of an electric motor is called the rotor.
A palindrome for a rotating engine part is Rotor.
The palindrome is Eye.
Armature current is the current flowing in a motor's armature. The "armature" is another name for the coil (or coils) of wire which are on the motor's "rotor", which is the part that rotates inside its stator. (The "stator" is the fixed, non-rotating part of the motor.)
The electromagnet in an electric motor is typically called the rotor or the armature. It is the part of the motor that rotates when an electric current is passed through it, generating mechanical energy.
The oars or when a motor is used, the propellers on the shaft sticking in the water.
"Level" is a palindrome meaning "no part higher than the other."
A crankshaft is the part of the engine that the linear piston rotates. The amount of turns in a crankshaft to complete 1 revolution in a V6 engine is four.
The part of an AC induction motor that turns is called the rotor. The rotor is located inside the stator, which is the stationary part of the motor. When alternating current flows through the stator windings, it creates a rotating magnetic field that induces current in the rotor, causing it to spin and produce mechanical output.