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MOTOR CORE ELECTRIC MOTORS

 

Lincoln Jore and Matt Jore came up with the idea of eliminating the wire windings and iron laminations used in conventional motors by embedding copper-etched conductors into a multi-layered printed circuit board to form a stator that works in conjunction with permanent magnets to produce torque in a new type of ironless and wireless motor.  They created a special pattern of conductive material, laid out on individual layers of conductive material, and laminated and interconnected to each other to form an efficient, compact, and powerful stator.  After six years of development by the Jores and Core Motion, Inc., the technology is now being referred to as COREâ„¢ (Conductor Optimized Rotary Energy).  With the highest energy factor per weight of any existing motor or engine, and one-third to one-fifth the size and use of raw materials, COREâ„¢ Technology is designed to replace existing conventional motion devices, motors, and engines.  The process for manufacturing a COREâ„¢ stator is the same well-known and mature process used in the construction of printed circuit boards (PCBs) and is, as such, a very reliable and cost-effective production process. Driven largely by the tremendous growth of the computer industry over the past thirty years, PCB manufacturing has evolved into one of the most mature and reliable methods of manufacturing.  The proprietary COREâ„¢ stator design allows for elimination of wires and is at the center of a portfolio of very unique and broad patent claims.  Core Motion, Inc. has been issued patents, based on US Patent No. 7,109,625, in thirty-two countries covering broad claims relating to the COREâ„¢ technology and several new patents on improvements are pending.

In most states, emissions standards, such as those set in California, have been adopted and are seriously challenging manufacturers of gasoline engine-powered products.  As a completely gas-free system, COREâ„¢ technology provides the unique ability to exceed these noise, efficiency, and emission standards without increasing costs and without sacrificing performance.  

 

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