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Friday, May 31, 2024

on video Building a Generator from a Washing Machine Motor Using a Permanent Magnet


 Building a Generator from a Washing Machine Motor Using a Permanent Magnet

Hello, in this video I tried to explain how you can turn the washing machine motor into a generator for water turbines and wind turbines. With a rotor that we created on the 3D printer, we included permanent magnets in the system and the result was a very good working generator. Thank you for watching.

Have an old front-load clothes washer and some PVC pipe lying around? Make a vertical wind generator and go GREEN the DIY way.

This step was the most destructive using various implements to separate the motor assembly from the washing machine. I'll leave it to your imagination and whatever tools you have on hand. The output of this step should be the coil assembly and the magnet assembly. Keep the shaft and bearings if you can too. Mine were pressed into the washing drum and were difficult to remove without destroying them. Keep the bolts from the coil and magnet assembly also. You may want to use them for your new hub.

Clean the magnets and coils, and remove any rust that may have built up on the ends of the coils. Then put a light coat of oil on the metal parts or a light layer of clear coat to keep them from rusting again.

This may be the most difficult part. You need to design a hub that will space the coils in line with the magnets, and also have some sturdy bearings at each end. I started out with a block of plastic used for an automotive brake rotor holding fixture. You could make the same on a lathe, or build one up from layers of wood or other plastic, etc.

I saved part of the original washing machine drum shaft where the two bearings were located and cut off the rest. Then I added some threaded rod in the end where the original bolt was located. The threaded rod will attach to my blade assembly.

Here is the hub bolted to the coils with a cutout for some wiring. At this point, I haven't rewired any of the coils. There are many DIY generator projects on the web using these same washing machine motors and some describe various ways to rewire them for different voltages and currents. Your application will define your wiring.

Here's a photo of the magnets and coils mounted on the new hub and shaft assembly. At this point, you can spin the assembly and measure the voltage output, current output, vs. RPM. These measurement steps, and a way to determine the required torque to spin the generator I will save for my next Instructable.

My blade design is based on some vertical blades I've seen, and in particular, a spinning porch ornament I purchased a few years back. The Idea is to have a cup-like section of the blade always in the direct flow of the wind.

First mark the cutting lines on the PVC pipe. You can sand off the marks after cutting and/or paint the blades if needed.

I used a hole saw to drill the center holes for the PVC post. The center post has caps on the ends to secure to the threaded rod.

Here's a photo of the completed generator ready for mounting on a porch, or in a tree, or wherever. This motor was rated at about 400 Watts, so I'm hoping for 50-100 watts in a good wind.

No load and full load torque was measured using a strain gage load cell mounted on a rod located one foot from the center of the hub. Data was captured using a national instruments DAQ card and DasyLab daq software. No load was all wires open, full load was all wires shorted. I tried to move the rod 90 degrees in 5 seconds at a steady rate manually.


No load torque averaged 0.39 ft-lbs, full load torque was approx. 1.25 ft-lbs


 Building a Generator from a Washing Machine Motor Using a Permanent Magnet

Hello, in this video I tried to explain how you can turn the washing machine motor into a generator for water turbines and wind turbines. With a rotor that we created on the 3D printer, we included permanent magnets in the system and the result was a very good working generator. Thank you for watching.

Have an old front-load clothes washer and some PVC pipe lying around? Make a vertical wind generator and go GREEN the DIY way.

This step was the most destructive using various implements to separate the motor assembly from the washing machine. I'll leave it to your imagination and whatever tools you have on hand. The output of this step should be the coil assembly and the magnet assembly. Keep the shaft and bearings if you can too. Mine were pressed into the washing drum and were difficult to remove without destroying them. Keep the bolts from the coil and magnet assembly also. You may want to use them for your new hub.

Clean the magnets and coils, and remove any rust that may have built up on the ends of the coils. Then put a light coat of oil on the metal parts or a light layer of clear coat to keep them from rusting again.

This may be the most difficult part. You need to design a hub that will space the coils in line with the magnets, and also have some sturdy bearings at each end. I started out with a block of plastic used for an automotive brake rotor holding fixture. You could make the same on a lathe, or build one up from layers of wood or other plastic, etc.

I saved part of the original washing machine drum shaft where the two bearings were located and cut off the rest. Then I added some threaded rod in the end where the original bolt was located. The threaded rod will attach to my blade assembly.

Here is the hub bolted to the coils with a cutout for some wiring. At this point, I haven't rewired any of the coils. There are many DIY generator projects on the web using these same washing machine motors and some describe various ways to rewire them for different voltages and currents. Your application will define your wiring.

Here's a photo of the magnets and coils mounted on the new hub and shaft assembly. At this point, you can spin the assembly and measure the voltage output, current output, vs. RPM. These measurement steps, and a way to determine the required torque to spin the generator I will save for my next Instructable.

My blade design is based on some vertical blades I've seen, and in particular, a spinning porch ornament I purchased a few years back. The Idea is to have a cup-like section of the blade always in the direct flow of the wind.

First mark the cutting lines on the PVC pipe. You can sand off the marks after cutting and/or paint the blades if needed.

I used a hole saw to drill the center holes for the PVC post. The center post has caps on the ends to secure to the threaded rod.

Here's a photo of the completed generator ready for mounting on a porch, or in a tree, or wherever. This motor was rated at about 400 Watts, so I'm hoping for 50-100 watts in a good wind.

No load and full load torque was measured using a strain gage load cell mounted on a rod located one foot from the center of the hub. Data was captured using a national instruments DAQ card and DasyLab daq software. No load was all wires open, full load was all wires shorted. I tried to move the rod 90 degrees in 5 seconds at a steady rate manually.


No load torque averaged 0.39 ft-lbs, full load torque was approx. 1.25 ft-lbs

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