Author Topic: HDD BLDC motor power ratings?  (Read 7536 times)

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Offline eneuroTopic starter

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HDD BLDC motor power ratings?
« on: April 22, 2014, 07:39:32 pm »
Hello,
What could be power ratings of this small hard disk drive BLDC motors?

I've disassembled one from old Segeate 30GB 7200RPM as I know:
 
Its 3 phase wires here with something like serial number, while Google says nothing about this KF1037SDAPV4 .
 
There is about 4.3 Ohm resistance beetween each 3 phase wires.

I do not need spin this motor to high speeds, while it will be reused in magnetic mixer, but I wonder how much power those HDD motors might have?

Update:
I've found some benchmark HDD idle power values
 
However, I have HDD motor only without any read/write operations...
Is it safe to limit current to lets say 1A @ 5V and drive this HDD BLDC without damage assuming it consumes this power for rotation and is driven by 3 phase BLDC motor driver?

« Last Edit: April 22, 2014, 08:57:29 pm by eneuro »
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Offline amyk

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Re: HDD BLDC motor power ratings?
« Reply #1 on: April 22, 2014, 08:46:24 pm »
You can look at the power consumption figures for an idea. I've seen ~30W on spinup but doubt it can maintain that level continuously without overheating; typically they are providing continuous power in the 5-10W range.
 

Offline eneuroTopic starter

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Re: HDD BLDC motor power ratings?
« Reply #2 on: April 22, 2014, 08:54:11 pm »
Thank you for hints.
Just updated my first thread post and added some HDD power ratings in idle mode.
I think, I will limit current to 1A @ 5V and start with 100mA while I do not need high RPM speeds and see what happends :-/O
« Last Edit: April 22, 2014, 08:56:22 pm by eneuro »
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Offline ovnr

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Re: HDD BLDC motor power ratings?
« Reply #3 on: April 22, 2014, 09:10:56 pm »
HDD motors are ridiculously wimpy. They're only there to spin what amounts to a flywheel; there is no load apart from bearing friction and air turbulence.

By magnetic mixer, I imagine you mean driving those small teflon-coated NIBs to stir things? It'll be too weak unless you use a VERY small stir magnet. The usual solution I've seen is just to take a decently powerful PC fan and use that - optionally snip off the blades, but you'll probably wreck the balance so badly it won't work well.


Or you could be fancy and wind a dozen electromagnets, position them in a circle, and drive those. ;)


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Offline eneuroTopic starter

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Re: HDD BLDC motor power ratings?
« Reply #4 on: April 23, 2014, 06:07:42 am »
By magnetic mixer, I imagine you mean driving those small teflon-coated NIBs to stir things?
It could be too easy ;)
Even normal magnets attached to this motor in this configuration

creates something like magnetic clutch when this 5cm (2 inch) rotor with another set of magnets is close to motor disk magnets.

This custom magnets rotor prototype should at given RPM speeds create something like liquid bearings at the bottom and maybe it will be able to rotate without any friction (no mechanical contact with box) in glass box filled with water based acid solutions, like 11% H2SO4 I'd like to use for  aluminium hard anodizing.

I do not need spin it too fast, but I will have better control using this BLDC motor and I'll be able to run it at lower RPM speeds, while PC fan was tricky to spin at voltage <5V in such magnetic clutch configurations, however 4 magnets magnetic clutch worked not so bad  >:D

It is easy to change motor disk magnetic field configuration simply by changing this  disk with magnets, so it will be fun  8)
« Last Edit: April 23, 2014, 06:14:22 am by eneuro »
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“Let the future tell the truth, and evaluate each one according to his work and accomplishments. The present is theirs; the future, for which I have really worked, is mine”  - Nikola Tesla
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