An electric motor is essentially a coil of wire spinning inside a magnetic field. In certain motor types, carbon brushes conduct power to the spinning coil through contact with a commutator, which "commutes" (sends) power to the coil.

1

Brush Function

Motor brushes remain stationary as the motor turns. They contact the commutator, transferring electricity to the commutator. The commutator is segmented with each segment corresponding to a different coil. As the rotor turns and commutator turns the brushes contact different segments, one at a time.

  • Motor brushes remain stationary as the motor turns.
  • The commutator is segmented with each segment corresponding to a different coil.
2

Brush Wear

When the motor is turning, the brushes and the commutator continuously come in and out of contact because the commutator is segmented. This places wear on the brushes in addition to the friction of sliding on the commutator.

3

Electrical Contact

The brushes must contact the commutator or the motor will not function. Attempting to lubricate the brushes with grease would cause the brushes to lose contact with the commutator. Graphite, a form of carbon used for lubrication, provides the main ingredient in motor brush manufacturing making other lubricants unnecessary.