Yes, but the power you get out will be much less than the power you put into the motor.
Yes, just reverse the start winding circuit.
yes go on youtube and type in wizard101 generator and they will show you peace out my name is randy styles
Yes, a small generator is good for home use as it will supply power to all your home appliances.
Yes. Large LCD TV uses about 400W (plasma TVs use more), playstation uses up to 150W depending on what its doing, refrigerators vary pretty widely but unlikely to be more that 200.
Yes. Yes.
Yes. You can run it backwards, spin the rotor of the motor and take electricity out.
I think it can work with a certain type of generator and an electric motor like one that uses 300w/h The idea is to run a generator that can produce more electricity than needed to run the motor that is powering it.
Yes, a 5500 watt generator should be able to run a 1 horsepower motor. A typical 1 horsepower motor requires around 750-1000 watts to operate, so the generator's output should be sufficient. Just make sure to check the starting wattage of the motor to ensure the generator can handle any initial surge in power.
Yes, by giving mechanical power to motor . It acts as a Generator.
Are you planning to build a perpetual motion machine in which the power generated by an AC generator is used to run an AC motor which is used to run the same AC generator which provides it with power? Because that won't work. Yes, you can use a motor to generate electricity, and you can use electricity to run a motor, but the process is not 100% efficient and if you try to make it a closed loop, it will run down fairly quickly. So, what do we actually do? We use fuel to run an AC generator, or we use waterfalls or wind, or some other energy source, and then we use the power to run our motor.
Yes, a 2800 watt generator should be able to run a 550 watt electric cement mixer motor. The generator's wattage is more than enough to power the motor with some extra capacity for other devices. Be sure to check the starting wattage of the motor as well to ensure the generator can handle the initial surge of power needed.
Yes, if the governor failed in a way that "makes it think" the generator is always running too fast it might prevent the generator from running at all.
Yes you can turn a motor into a generator, if it is a permanent magnet motor.
yes
yes, some can.
A 15 KW generator won't likely run everything in your house, but besides that it is not efficient. You will be using more electricity to run the generator than the power would deliver. You also defeat the reason for the generator - run your house when power goes out. Now if you had a wind turbine turning a generator you have a positive contribution to house power. This is how wind power works. There are also lots of issues associated with a power transfer switch and feeding power back into the grid.
Yes, but it would have to be a pretty big and expensive wind generator. You would need an inverter to produce at least 500 watts of 3 phase power. Unless you also had some big batteries, you could only run your motor when the wind is blowing!