Small and DIY Wind Turbines
See also:
Small wind turbines may be as small as a fifty watt generator for boat or caravan use. Small units often have direct drive generators, direct current
output, aeroelastic blades, lifetime bearings and use a vane to point
into the wind. Larger, more costly turbines generally have geared power
trains, alternating current output, flaps and are actively pointed into
the wind. Direct drive generators and aeroelastic blades for large wind
turbines are being researched.
A small wind turbine can be installed on a roof. Installation issues
then include the strength of the roof, vibration, and the turbulence
caused by the roof ledge. Small-scale rooftop wind turbines have been
known to be able to generate power from 10% to up to 25% of the
electricity required of a regular domestic household dwelling.[1]
Small-scale wind power in rural Indiana.
Small scale turbines for residential scale use are available, they
are usually approximately 7 feet (2 m) to 25 feet
(8 m) in diameter and produce electricity at a rate of
900 watts to 10,000 watts at their tested wind speed. Some units
have been designed to be very lightweight in their construction, e.g.
16 kilograms (35 lb), allowing sensitivity to minor wind
movements and a rapid response to wind gusts typically found in urban
settings and easy mounting much like a television antenna. It is
claimed that they are inaudible even a few feet under the turbine.[2] Dynamic braking
regulates the speed by dumping excess energy, so that the turbine
continues to produce electricity even in high winds. The dynamic
braking resistor may be installed inside the building to provide heat
(during high winds when more heat is lost by the building, while more
heat is also produced by the braking resistor). The location makes low
voltage (around 12 volt) distribution practical.
In the United States,
residential wind turbines with outputs of 2-10 kW, typically cost
between $12,000 and $55,000 installed ($6 per watt), although there are
incentives and rebates available in 19 states that can reduce the
purchase price for homeowners by up to 50 percent, to ($3 per watt).[3] The US manufacturer "Southwest Windpower,"[4] estimates a turbine to pay for itself in energy savings in 5 to 10 years.[5]
The American Wind Energy Association
has released several studies on the small wind turbine market in the
U.S. and abroad, showing that the U.S. continues to dominate the Small
Wind industry.[1]
According to another organization, the World Wind Energy Association,
it is difficult to assess the total number or capacity of small-scaled
wind turbines, but in China alone, there are roughly
300,000 small-scale wind turbines generating electricity.[6]
The dominant models on the market, especially in the United States, are horizontal-axis wind turbines (HAWT).
There have been a number of recent developments of mini-turbines which could be adapted to home use, including:
- The AeroTecture vertical-axis turbine[7]
- The AeroVironment Architectural Wind Project[8][9]
- The piezoelectric windmill project[10]
- The Swift home wind turbine.[11]
The Swift project peaked in 2004 and has had some implementation
difficulties while promising to be a low-noise/safe roof-mount/low-cost
alternative[12]
- The Motorwave micro-wind turbine[13][14][15]
DIY Wind turbines
Some hobbyists have built wind turbines from kits, sourced components, or from scratch. Do it yourself or DIY-wind turbine construction has been made popular by magazines such as OtherPower and Home Power,[16] websites as Instructables, and by TV-series as Jericho and The Time Machine. DIY-made wind turbines are usually smaller (rooftop) turbines of ~ 1kW or less.[17][18][19] These small wind turbines are usually tilt-up or fixed/guyed towers.[20]
However, larger (freestanding) and more powerful windtubines are
sometimes built as well. The latter can generate power of up to 10 kW.[21] In addition, people are also showing interest in DIY-construction of wind turbines with special designs as the Savonius, Panemone, wind turbine to boost power generation.[22][23] When compared to similar sized commercial wind turbines, these DIY turbines tend to be cheaper.[24][25] Through the internet, the community is now able to obtain plans to construct DIY-wind turbines.[26][27][28][29][30][31]
and there is a growing trend toward building them for domestic
requirements. The DIY-wind turbines are now being used both in
developed countries and in developing countries, to help power residences and small businesses. At present, organizations as Practical Action
have designed DIY wind turbines that can be easily built by communities
in developing nations and are supplying concrete documents on how to do
so.[32][33] To assist people in the developing countries, and hobbyists alike, several projects have been open-sourced (e.g. the Jua Kali wind turbine, Hugh Piggot's wind turbine, ForceField Wind Turbine, etc.).[34]
References
- ^ Rooftop wind turbines able to power up to 25% of domestic energy requirements
- ^ One of the most silent Micro Wind Turbines: Zephyr Airdolphin Z1000
- ^ Homespun Electricity, From the Wind - New York Times
- ^ Southwest Windpower
- ^ Wind turbine, a powerful investment
- ^ World Wind Energy Association Statistics
- ^ AeroTecture
- ^ "Energy Technology Center: Project Architectural Wind", AeroVironment Inc, 2006.
- ^ 'Micro' wind turbines are coming to town, CNET, February 10, 2006, Martin LaMonica
- ^ Shashank Priya et al. "Piezoelectric Windmill: A novel solution to remote sensing", Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, v. 44 no. 3 p. L104-L107, 2005.
- ^ Swift Turbines
- ^ Better Generation: Swift Rooftop wind energy system discussion
- ^ Motorwind
- ^ Lucien Gambarota: Alternative energy pioneer, CNN, 16 April 2007
- ^ Motorwind Turbines
- ^ OtherPower and Home Power as popular diy microgeneration magazines
- ^ British Wind and Energy Agency's DIY wind turbines page
- ^ Overview of wind turbine construction and info for proper building
- ^ VillageEarth AT SourceBook: Wind Generation
- ^ Smaller wind turbines usually of tilt-up or fixed design
- ^ DIY 10kw freestanding turbine (page 17)
- ^ Another DIY Savonious wind turbine
- ^ An improved design of a small savonious wind turbine
- ^ DIY windturbine for less than 80 dollar
- ^ Commercial wind turbine for 650 dollar
- ^ Wind turbine plans from the PESN-database
- ^ DIY 1000 Watt windturbine example with pictures
- ^ another DIY windmill-example with pictures
- ^ Builditsolar wind turbine plans
- ^ The Backshed Wind turbines plans
- ^ DIY Wind turbine upgrading
- ^ Practical action producing info to construct DIY wind turbines for the developing world
- ^ Basics on diy small scale windturbines and domestic power consumption
- ^ Jua Kali Wind Turbines open-sourced
See also
External links
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