I was wondering about the feasibility of building a homemade centrifuge for use with microtubes, test tubes, etc.
While I have the general idea down in my head, I'm stuck as to the logistics of it (i.e. r/min considerations, g accelerations, layout of the device), so if anyone could help steer the project it would be kindly appreciated. A few questions I have to start off:
1. What RPM range does a typical centrifuge operate at (right off the motor, what is the motor RPM)?
2. How effective would using gear ratios be to modify the motor RPM input to rotor output, and what gear ratio would be a good compromise between high RPM output and overshooting on torque?
3. How easy would it be to come across and purchase a motor capable of the above? (I'm a last-year high school / first year college student, cheaper is better )
4. I have utterly no electrical wiring expertise whatsoever. Mechanics, some. Electrical, none. How easy would it be (diagrams / walkthroughs appreciated) to wire the device to a simple 3 step switch mechanism (I'll explain below) which could feed off of standard 120V wall power?
What I mean by 3 step switch mechanism is:
1 switch to power the device on
1 switch also on that main circuit to 'lock out' or safety key the device (preferably keyed, i.e. car ignition keyed)
1 switch on the lid of the device to act as a breaker or 'fail safe' device - switch is nominally down, when the lid is lifted the power to the rotor is cut for safety purposes.
Thanks, it'll be an undertaking.
While I have the general idea down in my head, I'm stuck as to the logistics of it (i.e. r/min considerations, g accelerations, layout of the device), so if anyone could help steer the project it would be kindly appreciated. A few questions I have to start off:
1. What RPM range does a typical centrifuge operate at (right off the motor, what is the motor RPM)?
2. How effective would using gear ratios be to modify the motor RPM input to rotor output, and what gear ratio would be a good compromise between high RPM output and overshooting on torque?
3. How easy would it be to come across and purchase a motor capable of the above? (I'm a last-year high school / first year college student, cheaper is better )
4. I have utterly no electrical wiring expertise whatsoever. Mechanics, some. Electrical, none. How easy would it be (diagrams / walkthroughs appreciated) to wire the device to a simple 3 step switch mechanism (I'll explain below) which could feed off of standard 120V wall power?
What I mean by 3 step switch mechanism is:
1 switch to power the device on
1 switch also on that main circuit to 'lock out' or safety key the device (preferably keyed, i.e. car ignition keyed)
1 switch on the lid of the device to act as a breaker or 'fail safe' device - switch is nominally down, when the lid is lifted the power to the rotor is cut for safety purposes.
Thanks, it'll be an undertaking.