艺术
美容与健康
工艺
文化与历史
娱乐
环境
食品与饮料
绿色未来
逆向工程
科学
体育
技术
可穿戴设备
Building a Simple DC Electric Motor — Electromagnetic Rotation
Volt

创建者

Volt

23. March 2026

Building a Simple DC Electric Motor — Electromagnetic Rotation

Build a simple DC electric motor from a coil of enameled copper wire, a permanent magnet, and a battery. This demonstrates the fundamental principle of all electric motors: a current-carrying conductor in a magnetic field experiences a force (the Lorentz force), and if the conductor is arranged as a rotating coil with a commutator, the force produces continuous rotation.

Beginner
30-60 minutes

说明

1

Wind the Armature Coil

Wrap the enameled copper wire around a cylindrical form (a battery or marker pen works well) 5-10 times to create a flat, circular coil approximately 3-4cm in diameter. Leave 3-4cm of straight wire extending from each side of the coil as axle shafts. These shafts must be directly opposite each other and aligned along the same axis so the coil can spin freely. Wrap a short length of wire around the coil bundle at two points to keep the loops together. The coil should be balanced — if one side is heavier, it will not spin smoothly.

2

Create the Half-Commutator

This is the critical step. Strip the enamel insulation from one axle shaft completely (all around its circumference) using fine sandpaper. On the other axle shaft, strip the enamel from only one half of the circumference — leave the other half insulated. This half-stripped shaft acts as a simple commutator: when the bare side contacts the support, current flows through the coil and generates a magnetic field. When the coil rotates 180 degrees and the insulated side contacts the support, current is interrupted and the coil coasts on momentum. This on-off cycling with each rotation ensures the magnetic force always pushes in the same rotational direction.

Step 2 - Image 1
3

Build the Support Cradle

Unfold two large steel paper clips into an L-shape or hook shape that can support the coil axle shafts while allowing free rotation. The vertical section acts as a post, and a small loop or cradle at the top holds the axle shaft. Attach the paper clip supports to the battery terminals using rubber bands — one clip to the positive terminal, one to the negative terminal. Position the clips so their top cradles are at the same height and aligned so the coil hangs horizontally between them. The paper clips serve double duty: they support the coil mechanically and conduct electrical current from the battery to the coil axle shafts.

4

Position the Magnet

Place the permanent magnet on top of the battery, directly beneath the coil (or tape it to a support at coil level). The magnet's field should be perpendicular to the coil's axis of rotation. When current flows through the coil, the coil generates its own magnetic field. The interaction between the coil's field and the permanent magnet's field creates a torque (rotational force) on the coil. The closer the magnet is to the coil without touching, the stronger the force and faster the rotation. A neodymium magnet produces a much stronger field than a ceramic magnet and results in faster, more reliable rotation.

5

Start the Motor and Observe

Give the coil a gentle push to start it spinning. If the half-commutator is correctly made and the coil is balanced, it will accelerate and continue spinning on its own. The coil experiences a magnetic force during the half-rotation when current flows (bare enamel contacting the support), then coasts on angular momentum during the half-rotation when current is interrupted (insulated side contacting the support). If the motor does not sustain rotation, check: is the coil balanced and spinning freely without friction? Is the enamel fully stripped from the correct surfaces? Is the magnet close enough? Try reversing the magnet's polarity or the battery connection — if the initial push direction fights the magnetic force direction, the motor cannot sustain. This simple motor demonstrates the operating principle behind every electric motor in existence, from tiny phone vibration motors to industrial drives.

材料

  • Enameled copper wire (24-28 AWG) - 1m piece占位符
    查看
  • Neodymium or ceramic disc magnet - 1, approximately 20mm diameter piece占位符
    查看
  • D-cell battery (1.5V) - 1 piece占位符
    查看
  • Paper clips (large, steel) - 2 pieces
  • Rubber bands - 2 pieces

所需工具

  • Wire strippers or fine sandpaper (for stripping enamel)占位符
    查看
  • Pliers (needle-nose)占位符
    查看

CC0 公共领域

此蓝图以 CC0 协议发布。你可以自由复制、修改、分发和使用此作品,无需征得许可。

通过购买蓝图中的产品支持创客,他们将获得 创客佣金 (由供应商设定),或创建此蓝图的新版本并将其作为连接包含在你自己的蓝图中以分享收入。

讨论

(0)

登录 加入讨论

加载评论中...