hardrock21
New member
Well with what time I have playing with vacuum motors. and little tool motors. Best way I find of controlling speed of an electric motor is Controlling the electricity with one of those light dimmers.. I guess it works the same way just need a really big light dimmer, an a pretty strong spring. another way is using circuits. but I know very little about that application.
Make sure you do your research on the motor to make sure it will respond well to varying current loads. I very rarely use rheostats (light dimmer switches) to regulate inertial loads, they work much better for lights. I use exclusively PWM (pulse-width modulation) it is a much more efficient means of voltage regulation. In it's simplest explanation, rheostats typically use resistance to limit voltage and in my experience burn up much faster as it loses a lot of energy to heat. PWM changes the switching frequency of the voltage, basically turning the voltage on/off/on/off extremely fast with the only means of voltage regulation being how long the voltage is applied to the load compared to how long it is off.
Paul
) I've spent more time then I care to elaborate on playing around with the idea and if it weren't for that darn energy loss due to friction/heat I would have it nailed! Haha, but really, you can expect some return on current, enough to make a difference, but honestly, I don't think it's worth it for this application as that thing is going to be heavy enough as it is!