paul.1911
Member
Is this will really work? How the power can be increase without enough input!switch your ground and bulb connections around and you have it.
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Is this will really work? How the power can be increase without enough input!switch your ground and bulb connections around and you have it.
I suggest that you measure the current that the alternator produces at the various speeds.
Is this will really work? How the power can be increase without enough input!
Thats what I doubtThe power won't increase, it's simply a voltage doubler, and will reduce the current by half.
Dear Sir, the bulb which i want to use (replace) is 60W and my original bulb is 35W right?You are not increasing your power rather you are letting the voltage go up to 24 volts while dropping the amp load at the same time.
Basically its just changing the output impedance of the alternator to match a bulb that has half the resistance of the other one. It may not double the output wattage but it could help gain a few more!
Dear Sir, the bulb which i want to use (replace) is 60W and my original bulb is 35W right?
My alternator is giving 3A 12VAC to 35W connected with regulator, and a 60W bulb need 5A 12V and my alternator is not able to generate that much output.
If I double the volts to 24V and 3Amp will get half, which means 1.5A x 24V = 36W. How can I see the improvement?
and today I took a test with 60W bulb without regulator no extra load and at the speed of 40km/h the bulb was drawing 4 amp & 8v which is 32W
Then how a transformer could help mei couldn't understand!
All I need is more Ampere and I couldn't find any way![]()
I know rewinding is the only way to solve the problem.......but i don't know the original gauge of wire is used, as i know thinner wire will give more volts and less current and thicker wire more current. Also less rotation give more current more rotation give more volts but lesser current. I've read in most forum that 19G wire is being used, one guy use 20G with maximum rotation and got no improvement at all. Most people say more rotation = more current.I imagine he was assuming your existing lights were 6V (as most of this battery-less system were).
Like I said earlier - BIGGER BATTERY - and rewind both windings on the alternator accordingly, plus a suitable battery regulator.
The faster the engine spins the more voltage and more current are produced - current doesn't drop with speed.
You're getting confused because you're using a bulb as the load, and these have a positive temperature coefficient (so the lower the voltage, the more current they take).
Dear Sir, the bulb which i want to use (replace) is 60W and my original bulb is 35W right?
My alternator is giving 3A 12VAC to 35W connected with regulator, and a 60W bulb need 5A 12V and my alternator is not able to generate that much output.
If I double the volts to 24V and 3Amp will get half, which means 1.5A x 24V = 36W. How can I see the improvement?
and today I took a test with 60W bulb without regulator no extra load and at the speed of 40km/h the bulb was drawing 4 amp & 8v which is 32W
Then how a transformer could help me i couldn't understand!
All I need is more Ampere and I couldn't find any way
How many amps can your alternator produce at 24 volts?
If it can get to 2.5 or more then useing a transformer to step that 24 volt 2.5 amp output down to 12 volts at 5 amps will work.
What I am trying to explain is that in many cases PM alternator outputs are not exactly linear above their rated voltage and current ratio. It may have a 4 amp limit but if its putting out 4 amps at 6 volts (24 watts) and 12 volts (48 watts) and it has a peak no load voltage of 35 volts then it may be possible to cheat the system a bit by drawing only 2.5 amps at around 24 volts or 3 amps at 20 volts (60 watts) to get more wattage out.
Yeah i need to look over that. Some people have done that on other forum.Or as mentioned earlier use all three phases and see if you can get the needed wattage.
As far as fuel consumption concerns how many HP is your engine? 1 HP is 746 watts so unless you have a 1/2 hp or less engine I dont think the extra 30 or so watts you are trying to get is ever going to matter.
Thats what I've been thinking since i started the thread, but all hope vanished after the (8v 4amp) test.or 3 amps at 20 volts (60 watts) to get more wattage out
Thats what I've been thinking since i started the thread, but all hope vanished after the (8v 4amp) test.
Thats what I have been going on about (for how many posts now?) relating to using the transformer to trade peak voltage for more amps.
Actually for the transformer being its working a center tapped voltage bucking mode you can get 5 amps out of a 2.5 amp rated transformer being its only stepping down half the current and half the voltage at the same time on what is essentially one winding supplying 2.5 amps from each end to get 5 amps in the middle.
I read on other forums, the guys who are talking about using the full wave....its nothing!
what they have is......they removed the ground (green wire) from the bottom of the lightning coil and pulled that yellow wire from the center and connect to that end & they use that both wire to give power to Ape RR unit to convert the bike to full DC. Waste of time and money.
It is if you're just feeding the headlight with it - but not if you're using it to charge a decent size battery, and feeding the headlight from the battery (which is what improves your lighting - more than a bigger bulb, because it's constant).
I know those who done this, for the propose of installing HID & for that they installed the 7.5 amp battery cutting the original fitting using clips & belts because of not having the enough room.
Personally, I don't prefer to the HID, even if i have enough money....Click here