Gramme-ring single-phase–to–
direct-current rotary converter. (In actual use, the converter is
drum-wound and uses a
multipolar field.) –to–direct-current rotary converter, with the second phase connected at right angles to the first –to–direct-current rotary converter, with the phases separated by 120 degrees on the commutator The rotary converter can be thought of as a
motor–generator, where the two machines share a single rotating
armature and set of
field coils. The basic construction of the rotary converter consists of a DC generator (dynamo) with a set of
slip rings tapped into its rotor windings at evenly spaced intervals. When a dynamo is spun the electric currents in its rotor windings alternate as it rotates in the magnetic field of the stationary field windings. This alternating current is rectified by means of a
commutator, which allows
direct current to be extracted from the rotor. This principle is taken advantage of by energizing the same rotor windings with AC power, which causes the machine to act as a synchronous AC motor. The rotation of the energized coils excites the stationary field windings producing part of the direct current. The other part is alternating current from the
slip rings, which is directly rectified into DC by the
commutator. This makes the rotary converter a hybrid dynamo and mechanical rectifier. When used in this way it is referred to as a synchronous rotary converter or simply a
synchronous converter. The AC slip rings also allow the machine to act as an alternator. The device can be reversed and DC applied to the field and commutator windings to spin the machine and produce AC power. When operated as a DC to AC machine it is referred to as an
inverted rotary converter. One way to envision what is happening in an AC-to-DC rotary converter is to imagine a rotary reversing switch that is being driven at a speed that is synchronous with the power line. Such a switch could
rectify the AC input waveform with no magnetic components at all save those driving the switch. The rotary converter is somewhat more complex than this trivial case because it delivers near-DC rather than the pulsating DC that would result from just the reversing switch, but the analogy may be helpful in understanding how the rotary converter avoids transforming all of the energy from electrical to mechanical and back to electrical. Simplistically put, when one motor is powered, the opposing motor receives the mechanical energy, which causes it to generate current in the opposite form. Depending on which side is powered, the device converts AC to DC or DC to AC. The advantage of the rotary converter over the discrete motor–generator set is that the rotary converter avoids converting all of the power flow into mechanical energy and then back into electrical energy; some of the electrical energy instead flows directly from input to output, allowing the rotary converter to be much smaller and lighter than a motor–generator set of an equivalent power-handling capability. The advantages of a motor–generator set include adjustable
voltage regulation, which can compensate for
voltage drop in the supply network; it also provided complete
power isolation, harmonics isolation, greater surge and transient protection, and
sag (brownout) protection through increased momentum. In this first illustration of a single-phase to direct-current rotary converter, it may be used five different ways: • If the coil is rotated, alternating currents can be taken from the collector rings, and it is called an
alternator. • if the coil is rotated, direct current can be taken from the commutator, and it is called a
dynamo. • If the coil is rotated, two separate currents can be taken from the armature, one providing direct current and the other providing alternating current. Such a machine is called a
double current generator. • If a direct current is applied to the commutator, the coil will begin to rotate as a
commutated electric motor and an alternating current can be taken out of the collector rings. This is called an
inverted rotary converter (see
inverter). • If the machine is brought up to synchronous speed by external means and if the direction of the current through the armature has the correct relationship to the field coils, then the coil will continue to rotate in synchronism with the alternating current as a
synchronous motor. A direct current can be taken from the commutator. When used this way, it is called a
rotary converter.
Self-balancing dynamo The self-balancing dynamo is of similar construction to the single- and two-phase rotary converter. It was commonly used to create a completely balanced three-wire 120/240-volt AC electrical supply. The AC extracted from the slip rings was fed into a transformer with a single center-tapped winding. The center-tapped winding forms the DC neutral wire. It needed to be driven by a mechanical power source, such as a steam engine, diesel engine, or electric motor. It could be considered a rotary converter used as a double current generator; the alternating current was used to balance the DC neutral wire. ==Rotary phase converter==