Making An Electrical Generator: Link To 6 Gens Page
Making An Electrical Generator: Link To 6 Gens Page
The generator is made from a coil of wire (about 1000 turns) wound around the last 3
cm, or so, of a large nail. When a spining magnet is placed near to the device it
induces a voltage into the coil and this can then be used to light a bulb (or better still
an LED see end for details) - generation of electricity can therefore be simply
demonstrated.
Step 1
Make up two cardboard circles about 3cm in diameter (1-2 mm thick). Carefully
pierce a hole in the middle of the circles. Find a large (10-15 cm long, 6 mm wide)
clean (unrusty) nail having a large head. Thread one of the circles onto the nail and
push right up to the head.
Step 2
Cover the last 3-4 cm of the nail with a single layer of insulation tape (leave the nail
head uncovered). Push the second circle onto the nail but only so far as the insulation
tape. Add more tape onto the other side of the circle to fix the circle in place. You
should now have a ready made 'spool' on which to wind the coil.
Step 3
Obtain some thin insulated copper wire (say 25m or so of 30SWG, aprox. 0.3mm
diameter) leave about 20-30 cm free and start to wind turns onto the insulated part of
the nail between the two circles. Wind 1000-1500 turns (the exact number does not
matter much and will depending on how neat you can get them on before they spill
over the restraining cardboard circles). Leave another 20-30 cm free at the end and
then cut the wire. Tape up the whole assembly so that the wire does not come undone.
Step 4
Take the free ends of the wires and scrape off the insulation. Wire them to a bulb or to
an LED. Bring a magnet close to the head of the nail and while holding it about 5mm
or so from the head rapidly move the magnet from side to side. The Bulb or LED will
light showing generation of electricity !!
AC or DC
This simple generator is called an AC generator. This means that the voltage
appearing at the two wires alternates between + and -, and - and + each time the
magnet makes a complete revolution. As a result the generator can light a bulb or an
LED without you having to worry about which way round the connections need to go
(as they are effectively reversing all the time anyway). However, this simple generator
is not good for running radios, calculators or other devices that need a direct current
(DC) that is produced for example from a battery. You can have fun though
connecting up speakers to the generator output, as you can hear the electricity
alternating - but please don't use your parents best Hi-Fi Speakers !, try using
walkman type headphones etc.
3) how about trying other forms of energy to power the rotating magnet, eg. wind
power, wave power (for example see the section building your own windmill)
4) can you build-in a moving switch to make the voltage direct (DC) instead of
alternating (AC) - this is called a commutator
5) can you use the nail-coil (without the magnet) as a 'search' coil for detecting
magnetic fields ? Try putting the nail-head coil near to a speaker playing load music,
does the LED flash with the music ?
NOTE: never go near to mains powered devices of any kind with this apparatus