Anyone ever use an electric clutch

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Splashman

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I know it isn't ideal, but I just kind of thought it would be interesting.

I have a few old air conditioning pumps laying around with 12 VDC V-belt clutch pulleys on them. I was wondering if I isolated the pulley, mounted it to my 11 HP briggs engine and used it to belt drive my transaxle would it hold up?

I know it's silly, just wondering if anyone ever tried it before.
 

Kaptain Krunch

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I have a few of those kicking around from lawnmowers, they used them to drive the blades. I have no clue how well they would hold up, but the problem i see is you cant slip it at all, its either completely engaged or not at all.
 

Kenny_McCormic

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No, on top of VIOLENT engagement, I don't think an AC clutch is up to that kind of power, nor will it fit on a briggs. The mower PTO clutches are meant for driving blades and snowblowers, not your ***.
 

frederic

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A modern automotive air conditioning compressor draws about 2HP continuous with an initial requirement of 3HP when the clutch closes. Also, these compressors are designed with variable vanes to minimize the "thump" when the clutch is electrically activated.

Older air automotive air conditioning compressors could require as much as 4HP and the clutch was designed to take 5HP, because engagement was real harsh on both components.

Mower PTO clutches as they are called, generally rated to 5HP even if the engine is much larger, because it doesn't take 5HP to spin a 20", 22" or 24" blade. Remember that the larger mower decks have more than one blade, so the blades themselves on those decks are smaller than even a 5 HP push mower (typically 26-34" depending on the mower).

The PTO clutch on farm tractors is another animal altogether, and really just a one-way clutch used to avoid the situation where you push the clutch in on the tractor to stop movement and the momentum of the mower blades (or other implement) continuing to turn the PTO shaft, keeping the transmission bits turning and the tractor moving. It works much the same way as a ratchet wrench works, and if you rotate them by hand you'll even hear the clicking.

I was thinking about this for my son's riding kart (see "backbone kart" thread), because with a 4-5HP electric motor, this clutch might be a perfect fit - and allow me to spin the motor up a litlte bit before engaging the clutch.
 

TOO FAST

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I understand they are rated at 70 ft lbs breakaway. Well above
most of our engine torque ratings. I've though they would be a
neat way to engage a second gear. You could have a regular
torque converter and once its all in, engage the clutch which would then engage a second torque converter - giving you a nice slow start and a very high speed. Haven't figured it all out
maybe someone can figure a way to make it work
 

Splashman

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I scrapped the whole idea. I mad a nice traditional 2 idler pulley belt clutch.

 
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