Almost anything is 'possible' but this would be classed as extremely difficult by most people.Is it possible to put a shaft on the other end of a telsa motor?
I doubt the shaft is rated for six times as much torque...Well I'm trying to connect about 6 of them together in series mechanically. Any idea how?
Ask yourself if the motor shaft of the one on the load end can handle 6x the torque for starters.Well I'm trying to connect about 6 of them together in series mechanically. Any idea how?
?? Radial arrangement around a central power take off gear ?Well I'm trying to connect about 6 of them together in series mechanically. Any idea how?
I figured they would be playing this the whole time.I wonder what they are using for sound. No such thing as a quiet cigarette boat.
further to electro_wrks post you'll find lots of useful photos and videos on Damiens thread;Correct me if I'm wrong but on most model s if not all arent two motors hooked together at a gearbox anyway.
If you can work with the reduced RPM, this might be possible:Is it possible to put a shaft on the other end of a telsa motor?
To me it looks like the rube goldberg version of a fan motor. I mean I get having some redundancy, but they seem to have taken it to places it was never meant to go. two packs and two motors and controllers would do nicely (and be more efficient), but they have 12 motors and 12 "controllers" and there is another controller looking thing upstream from the controllers, perhaps to reconfigure the battery or something, and wires everywhere. I don't know if "impressive" is the word I would use, especially with the efficiency hit and over-complicated layout.But the design concept and details are impressive,
I think you missed the point..To me it looks like the rube goldberg version of a fan motor. I mean I get having some redundancy, but they seem to have taken it to places it was never meant to go. two packs and two motors and controllers would do nicely (and be more efficient), but they have 12 motors and 12 "controllers" and there is another controller looking thing upstream from the controllers, perhaps to reconfigure the battery or something, and wires everywhere. I don't know if "impressive" is the word I would use, especially with the efficiency hit and over-complicated layout.
I don't think you'll find any modern EV motor with a dual-ended shaft, because there is no reason to want two shaft outputs. In those rare cases where a motor is designed to be stacked end-to-end (transmitting each motor's output through the next motor's shaft), it will probably have a female spline in one end, rather than two protruding shafts. The YASA 400 is an example of a motor which has a female spline right through it, so multiple motors can be stacked on one splined shaft.Is there anything of similar power ac off the shelf preferably with dual shaft?
Tesla Model S/X motors are the most common EV motors which are available in salvage and have a high power rating in the original vehicle. On the other hand, most EV manufacturers rate their motors for continuous duty, and some of those motors may be just as capable as Tesla's.The Tesla drive does seem to be quite expensive and the concept I had in mind hinged mainly on finding them salvaged.
... and even then, each motor will presumably drive a separate wheel; it would make no sense for Tesla to use to motors to drive one shaft.The new Roadster has dual rear motors...