ninefinger
Well-Known Member
Look at the system and break it down to deal with each part in its own right then combine the pieces together to get your steam-drive-electric-generating-battery-charging goal.
Using a (BLDC) is probably the most robust and one of the easiest to set up as a generator.
The electric generating is easily accomplished with a Brushless DC motor (BLDC) driven by something - in your case a steam engine. As mentioned these motors are rated by KV and as your steam engine is likely to be low rpm you want to find ther lowest KV motor you can get.
The output of the BLDC when driven by something is an 3-phase alternating current. Your application calls for DC to charge a battery. Simple - a bridge rectifier will change the 3 phase - make it yourself from some diodes
For a source of inexpensive (relatively speaking) BLDC motors look at on-line far east hobby stores - here is an example http://www.hobbyking.com/hobbyking/store/__4652__KD_63_24L_Brushless_Outrunner_193Kv.html $55 isn't very bad at all (plus shipping). So using that one as an example you'll probably need to spin it at ~ 2500rpm to get your desired voltage output.
2500 rpm too fast for your steam engine? No problem - just use gearing or a belt drive to step up the rpm from the engine to the generator. A 2.5:1 step up would let your steam engine run at a more comfortable 1000rpm.
After all of that then you can look at adding voltage regulators and such to keep the output voltage constant so you don't cook your battery.
My 2 cents..
Using a (BLDC) is probably the most robust and one of the easiest to set up as a generator.
The electric generating is easily accomplished with a Brushless DC motor (BLDC) driven by something - in your case a steam engine. As mentioned these motors are rated by KV and as your steam engine is likely to be low rpm you want to find ther lowest KV motor you can get.
The output of the BLDC when driven by something is an 3-phase alternating current. Your application calls for DC to charge a battery. Simple - a bridge rectifier will change the 3 phase - make it yourself from some diodes
For a source of inexpensive (relatively speaking) BLDC motors look at on-line far east hobby stores - here is an example http://www.hobbyking.com/hobbyking/store/__4652__KD_63_24L_Brushless_Outrunner_193Kv.html $55 isn't very bad at all (plus shipping). So using that one as an example you'll probably need to spin it at ~ 2500rpm to get your desired voltage output.
2500 rpm too fast for your steam engine? No problem - just use gearing or a belt drive to step up the rpm from the engine to the generator. A 2.5:1 step up would let your steam engine run at a more comfortable 1000rpm.
After all of that then you can look at adding voltage regulators and such to keep the output voltage constant so you don't cook your battery.
My 2 cents..