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Bryan: I'm just guessing here, but my thought would be that conicals simply don't generate the same amount of heat. I'm guessing that temperature is more of an issue than heat, anyway, and that they won't reach the same temperature as flat burrs, not matter how much heat the larger mass will hold.
If you turned a hand mill all day long it wouldn't really get all that hot at all. Warm, and that's about it.
...remember!, the motor also transfer heat, not just the friction.
I've not done any experiments, though sounds like a great reason to justify purchasing an IR thermometer :)
As I understand, the heat generated by the burrs is due to friction from the burnishing action... so sharp burrs run cooler than dull burrs. So assuming burrs are appropriately sharp, slower turning = lower heat generated = lower temperatures. You are correct, though... if heat produced is equal, larger mass = lower temperature, heating up slower but staying at that temperature longer.
The motor discussion is interesting. Jeremy, you are correct that isolation and fins are cheaper than active cooling. The thing to remember with fins though is that they transfer heat by conduction... so they need to be in contact with the hot part to function. This makes them ineffective in cooling the rotor of the motor. Also, since the grinding burrs are attached to the steel motor shaft, heat in the rotor will be conducted right up to the burrs, regardless of how much insulation there is between the motor itself and the grinding chambers.
The benefit of fan-cooling is that it can remove heat from the hot rotor before it conducts up to the burrs. The other benefit is that you can modify an existing grinder to add a cooling fan... a little harder to add fins.
Agreed, this might be worth trying... but I'm pretty sure an electric or other fan would do a better job. Why?
Because, fins are great for drawing heat out of things they are in contact with. They are useless in cooling things that they are not in contact with - any tiny airgap renders them nearly useless. This is why there is often conductive grease under them in electronic applications - to eliminate any possible airgap. If I understand correctly, much of the heat in motors builds up in the windings. Since this is part of the rotor, which is in the middle of the motor and surrounded by an airgap, I'm not sure how effective external fins would be in cooling that hottest part of the motor.
What I'd think would work better is a "slinger fan" on the motor shaft, inside the grinder housing. This draws air over the motor, through the middle of the motor, and basically sucks heat out of the motor shaft. I imagine there are some grinders that use this fairly common part to keep it cool, but I haven't run across one yet.
Agreed, this might be worth trying... but I'm pretty sure an electric or other fan would do a better job. Why?
Because, fins are great for drawing heat out of things they are in contact with. They are useless in cooling things that they are not in contact with - any tiny airgap renders them nearly useless. This is why there is often conductive grease under them in electronic applications - to eliminate any possible airgap. If I understand correctly, much of the heat in motors builds up in the windings. Since this is part of the rotor, which is in the middle of the motor and surrounded by an airgap, I'm not sure how effective external fins would be in cooling that hottest part of the motor.
What I'd think would work better is a "slinger fan" on the motor shaft, inside the grinder housing. This draws air over the motor, through the middle of the motor, and basically sucks heat out of the motor shaft. I imagine there are some grinders that use this fairly common part to keep it cool, but I haven't run across one yet.
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