The generator emits black smoke and cannot be used.
The generator is smoking. The insulated enameled wire inside the generator may be burned. Burnt enameled wire causes a short circuit in the coil and the generator cannot be used.
Generators refer to mechanical equipment that converts other forms of energy into electrical energy. They are driven by water turbines, steam turbines, diesel engines or other electrical machines, and generate water flow, air flow, fuel combustion or nuclear fission. The energy is converted into mechanical energy and transmitted to the generator, which is then converted into electrical energy.
Generators are widely used in industrial and agricultural production, national defense, science and technology and daily life. There are many forms of generators, but their principles of operationoperation are all based on the law of electromagnetic induction and the law of electromagnetic force. Therefore, the general principle of its construction is: using suitable magnetic and conductive materials to form magnetic circuits and circuits that conduct electromagnetic induction among themselves to generate electromagnetic energy and achieve the conversion goal of energy.
History of invention
In 1832, the Frenchman Bixy invented the manual DC generator. The principle is to modify the magnetic flux in the coil by rotating the electromotive induced permanent magnet. force and produces this electromotive force in the form of direct voltage.
In 1866, German Siemens invented the self-excited DC generator.
In 1870, Gram of Belgium manufactured an annular armature and invented the annular armature generator. This type of generator uses hydraulic energy to turner the generator rotor. After repeated improvements, it reached an output power of 3.2 kW in 1875.
In 1882, Gordon of the United States made a giant two-phase generator with an output of 447 kW, d 'a height of 3 meters and a weight of 22 tonnes.
In 1896, Tesla's two-phase alternator began operating at the Nyala power station, and 3,750 kW, 5,000 V AC, was sent to Buffalo, 40 kilometers away. there.