Windtamer wind turbines

Started by frazoo, March 11, 2011, 09:23:57 PM

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frazoo

A friend of mine visited relatives in upper N.Y. state this past weekend and was shocked to see a bunch of these near his mothers house that weren't there a year or two ago.  Anyone have any experience with them?

frazoo
...use a bigger hammer

bayview

    . . . said the focus was safety, not filling town coffers with permit money . . .


frazoo

He has brochures coming, I'll let you know.

frazoo
...use a bigger hammer

glenn kangiser

First I have seen of them although their theory looks sound, but looks big and ugly and can't be put high enough to get to the good wind.

Tree and building turbulence goes to about 30 feet above obstacle tops.  The good wind is above that.  Wind at 100 feet is about 3 times that on the ground or more,

I see that they have a better system of vacuum assist via the housing but keeping it at 20 to 30 feet probably defeats more than the gained benefit.

I haven't worked numbers on it but it looks like they want better wind than many places get on the ground for good production.

"Always work from the general to the specific." J. Raabe

Glenn's Underground Cabin  http://countryplans.com/smf/index.php?topic=151.0

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Windpower

5 meters per second = 11 mph I assume this is an average (but since they don't define the test it is probably just an extrapolation of the turbine output at 11 MPH)

http://www.windtamerturbines.com/windtamer-turbines/request-a-quote/windtamer4-5gt/

so 960 Kw-Hr per 12 month equals ~ 60 Kw-Hr per month not much more than the dead simple and cheap Southwest windpower
AirX at 30 Kw-Hr per month in an average 10 mph site

not sure about this one -- the basic design has been tried before with not too good results -- high wind failures were common IIRC

couldn't find the pricing....




Often, our ignorance is not as great as our reluctance to act on what we know.


glenn kangiser

The 12" tower and gigantic base has to be expensive.

Lots of drag with that design to make the low pressure area behind the fan, so lots of wind resistance, causing the stresses that make them keep it low to the ground on the massive base.
"Always work from the general to the specific." J. Raabe

Glenn's Underground Cabin  http://countryplans.com/smf/index.php?topic=151.0

Please put your area in your sig line so we can assist with location specific answers.

glenn kangiser

Here is a guy who does not think a lot of the value of the Windtamer but presents a lot of info that is not in favor of investing in wind either.

Not well written -from a forum-  but the information looks sound.  

http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=53076352

Not pretty as I mentioned



QuoteWilson is getting his WindTamer turbine installed Tuesday. He says he paid $25,000 for his model, but he expects it to pay for itself in the next seven to ten years.

http://rochester.ynn.com/content/top_stories/493368/horse-farmer-first-to-buy-windtamer-turbine/
"Always work from the general to the specific." J. Raabe

Glenn's Underground Cabin  http://countryplans.com/smf/index.php?topic=151.0

Please put your area in your sig line so we can assist with location specific answers.

Alan Gage

Some (what I think) is good reading for anyone considering wind power:

http://www.otherpower.com/otherpower_wind.shtml

http://www.otherpower.com/bottom_line.shtml (the "buyer beware" section at the bottom of the page might apply here).

http://otherpower.com/users_manual.shtml

I was hot on doing wind power and maybe getting off the grid when I bought my place a few years ago. The otherpower.com website, while being pro windpower, seems to have more science than hype and after reading some of their stuff soon realized it wouldn't be as cheap and easy as I thought. Same as with everything in life, what seems simple on the surface is actually very complicated once you get into it.

I know little about wind technology and nothing about Windtamer products but when I looked at their site little red flags started popping up everywhere. I think the Windtamer website covers pretty much every "beware of" indicator listed in the second link above. Do your homework.

Alan

glenn kangiser

I agree with you, Alan.  I have a Bergey XL1 but was aware of the limitations when I bought it. 

It is considered a #1 wind generator, but I only view it as extra power to assist during storms and morning/afternoon heat cycles or night winds.  It Is a 1 kw wind generator 85 feet up.  Tower and generator should be around $5000 now with probably a similar or less  install cost.  I built my own tower and did my own install.

Many people make the mistake of thinking they put it up and  plug in.  Much of the time it only puts out a few hundred watts or less and does not have ideal wind.
"Always work from the general to the specific." J. Raabe

Glenn's Underground Cabin  http://countryplans.com/smf/index.php?topic=151.0

Please put your area in your sig line so we can assist with location specific answers.


frazoo

Oh well, sounds like more hype than good science.  Thanks for the input guys. I'm not a science kinda guy so I appreciate the objective input received here.  Be nice when science/technology catches up with our needs.

frazoo
...use a bigger hammer

UK4X4


Dam that things fugly

comercial wind turbines look nothing like that.............something to do with efficiency !

Wind power is a happy addon to a standard solar system when its cloudy - its usually windy.....a bit of an either or situation, most remote telemetry stations use both simply to sustain the system longer under bad weather conditions.

boats comonly have both.....same reason


extra power is always good.....neither method offers 365/24 hr operation at the makers stated power rating