New and Improved Wind Power

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Wind Power Warranty Considerations

  • Exactly what does the warranty cover?
  • Is the turbine covered for at least five years?
  • What are the exclusions or restrictions? Read them carefully.
  • What is the top wind speed, after which warranty coverage is excluded? (The warranty should be good for winds of at least 100 mph.)
  • Is the warranty transferable to the next homeowner?
  • If you do not understand any part of the warranty, don’t be afraid to ask questions.
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Comments

  • r2 12/26/2008 6:26:28 AM

    Its good to see Southwest improve their performance in slower speed wind. Kudos.

    Having said that you need "straight" and consistent wind for any small HAWT to work and this limits most wind sites to 100 foot towers which are NOT allowed where most people live in urban and sub-urban areas.

    If you are looking for small wind power solutions in urban areas, really the only choice are Vertical Axis Wind Turbines with CURVED blades which support any direction of attack and a vertical angle of attack from +25 to -25 degrees for turbulent, twisting and tumbling wind at low and medium wind speeds.. Helical blades also reduce vibration as well as noise.

    Even then, if you go for an urban VAWT you need to convince city government officials to let you operate such VAWTS, and it does not make sense unless there is a Feed Law (see http://www.wind-works.org/articles/feed_laws.html)

    Getting local government permission to erect a VAWT can take along time. You need to pick one that is quiet as well, under 60 decibels from 5 meters (just like HVAC units on a roof).

    HAWTS hunt in such winds, and when they do, their power output drops by as much as 35% to 65% when hunting (in light and medium winds in urban or suburban areas this can be 65%+ of the time of operation). I would suggest anyone to check out www.wind-works.org for more information on this hunting phenomena. There are some good videos there that show just how poorly HAWTS operate in urban areas.

    What this means is the annual yield from the small HAWT will be 35% to 65% less than advertised in urban and suburban areas, even on a 100 foot tower,, so the location of your site (no nearby trees or buildings for 1/4 mile in prevailing wind direction) and the height of the site (100 foot tower) is very important to getting close to vendor advertised power outputs.

    To really reach a goal of off grid self dependency you will need to employ solar as well as use clean storage like air compression (

  • Steve 6/23/2008 5:14:22 AM

    WInd power has always fascinated me, but check out this new wind turbine that is coming to market in New York: www.windtamerturbines.com/ It seems to offer a very high efficiency and is low impact to wildlife and humans that live near one.

  • spanish_houston 12/16/2007 7:35:29 PM

    Alexcis: You need to check your site directly. It is important to
    look at solar and wind maps that show what class your area is in,
    but it is more important to look at the site yourself because
    terrain differences cause differences in microclimates and sun
    exposure. For instance, if your land is on the north side of a
    mountain, the mountain may block sun for much of the day. The same
    goes for large trees in a heavily forested area. And so on. Wind is
    much more variable and much more affected by differences in terrain
    causing unique micro-climates. You simply have to be onsite
    checking the wind patterns over a space of a year to get an idea of
    what wind patterns and speeds will be like on your land. Not only
    that, but individual spots on your property may have much more wind
    on average than the rest of the land. I live in central Spain, and
    this area gets good sun most of the year. Because of the large
    number of mountain ranges, there are many areas within Spain that
    also get good wind. I get a fair amount of wind. In my opinion, it
    is always best to go with a hybrid system if you are off-grid (I
    have a 1kW Bergey wind turbine and 600W PV system that supplies all
    my house electrical needs; of course, I have a small house, all my
    electrical appliances are ultra energy-efficient, and my
    energy-consumption habits and lifestyle are conservative.) The
    sun-wind combo compliments each other. Often when it is not sunny,
    it is windy. And you often get wind at night when there is no sun.
    As a matter of fact, taking advantage of as many energy sources as
    possible is best. I plan to put a micro-hydro turbine in my
    seasonal creek in future because the times of the year when I get
    both little wind and little sun are those times when my creek is
    exploding with flowing water energy. The trick is determining the
    balance. If you get lots of sun all year round, and the wind is
    strong on occasion, go with a bigger PV array and smaller wind
    generator and vic

  • paige 11/25/2007 8:25:30 PM

    looking for info, residential wind power, chandler texas, thank you

  • captdan2 11/25/2007 3:37:45 PM

    I enjoyed your article on Windpower. I just installed a 10KW Bergey
    on a 100' Lattice tower. I have also just become a Dealer for
    Bergey and hope to get very involved in Wind Energy. I have been
    happy with my production so far. I havae produced 1050 KWH in the
    first 23 days and we have had less wind than usual for
    November.There were no problems with installation or start up and
    have been no glitches since commissioning on November 2, 2007. I
    also must give credit to Ameren Power for their quick response to
    my request for inter connect to the grid. They were quite helpful
    and cooperative to work with. I had anticipated a less than
    enthusiastic response but was pleasantly surprised. I'm looking for
    a 8 year pay back on my system with the 50% funding from the State
    of Illinois and the recently passed net metering act which takes
    place April 1st of next year. Hope this is useful info for somebody
    and would be glad to answer any inquires at the E-mail address..
    Thanks Dan

  • linda 7/10/2007 4:26:28 PM

    thank you john for your comment. you are so right.

  • Lee 6/25/2007 9:53:00 PM

    Sheryl: Actually, the wind map does open but the map is awfully
    small. I did some rough scaling and it looks like you are out of
    luck as you are in class 1; you would need to be further west (like
    Canton) just to get into a class 2 area. Alexcis: We are building
    north of Sparks, NV which is somewhere between a class 2 and 3.
    Wind power has a terrific capital cost and we are not going to use
    it; we will use solar for electric and water heating. But I am not
    going to invest in batteries, the grid will provide the off-solar
    power. Do some back issue reading of Home Power as they are very
    thorough about costs and even systemics of all systems. But start
    with knowing your site's solar potential and wind power class, how
    much do you want to spend and how much you want/need to be off the
    grid. Getting off the grid will require both solar and wind
    generation. Here in Tucson, solar water heating saves so much
    electric power for a small investment(built it my- self from a kit)
    with a 2 year payback. Electric is a long term payback,I figure it
    will take 10 years in Nevada. Hope this helps. Lee Olson

  • alexcis 6/20/2007 2:09:38 AM

    Hello! My family is currently building two houses on our ranch
    property in Mora, NM. We live in San Diego, CA and are doing much
    of our business via email/phone correspondence. Right now we are
    currently debating whether to go with solar or wind energy for our
    houses. Could you please explain the benefit of choosing to go
    solar over wind or vice versa? Any and all help would be greatly
    appreciated. -Alexcis Melendez

  • Trevor 6/10/2007 9:30:25 AM

    The problem with solar and wind is in the fails assumption that net
    metering actually works, if it did, the power companies would not
    need a LAW mandating it. Imagine a scientist came up with a magic
    black box that put out no power 2/3 the time, then of 1/3 of the
    time it put out too little power with surges of way too much power.
    In the real world, that is an interseting novelty, but hardly
    useful. That is solar and wind. They put out random amounts of
    power most of the time. To be useful, you have to match the power
    with the load. The average house uses 1.5 kw/hr, but try running
    the average house on a 1.5 KW generator. You can't. By the time you
    turn on a microwave and the refrigerator, you are way over 1.5 KW
    and you've burned up the generator. You need a power source that
    can rise and fall, that can match the demand. To run a house, you
    need surges of 10KW down to .5KW. The magic of the grid is its
    ability to do this seamingly impossible task. That is the science
    of LOAD MANAGEMENT. The more random power generators that get
    plugged into the grid by legal mandates of NET METERING, the more
    difficult load management will be. Consider, every time the wind
    surges, the windmill pumps power into the grid. Perhaps enough to
    run two houses. The wind dies. Now your house and the other house
    start drawing power from the grid under NET METERING. To the load
    manager, he has the effect of 2 homes suddenly jumping onto the
    grid out of nowhere. The missing link is the same problem electric
    cars have, The battery. To store in the megawatt range is difficult
    and expensive to do. To make windmills really work, you have to
    store power in the TERAwatt range. The challenge of that dwarfs the
    challenges of the Manhatton Project. Sorry, it ain't ready. Not
    yet.

  • Sheryl 5/31/2007 4:04:40 PM

    Is Wind Power Cost-effective for You? The link to the wind map in
    this article does not work. How can I find out whether Hawkins TX
    75765 is an effective place to build a windmill?

  • Catspaw 5/29/2007 5:25:52 PM

    Genrally speaking I find only about 5%-10% of any publication
    useful. Therefore, I peruse many of them. While I'm not cancelling
    my subscription to MEN, it never ceases to amaze me at some of the
    things I read in your magazine. Apparently you feel that somewhere
    between $15,000 and $80,000 for a wind power system is affordable.
    While in the large picture (the business or financial picture) it
    might be cost effective, it's not particularly useful to the
    average person. Unfortunately, there is a very low percentage of
    people that have more than enough money and a very high percentage
    of people who don't have enough. If it's going to cost me $15,000
    plus to save the world, then the world is going to die. Because I,
    and the majority of people, can't afford this. Since it's really up
    to the majority of people (you know....the ones without alot of
    money....) it would be more effective to present articles that us
    poor people can find useful.

  • cindi 5/21/2007 2:31:13 PM

    ABOUT !!June/July 2007 New and Improved Wind Power By Greg Pahl I
    would like to see a comprehensive article about the onslaught of
    our rural countryside's by mega corporations driven by greed and
    subsidized to the teeth by our government.All this crap about wind
    power is nothing but another way to factory farm our resources.This
    is insanity at its best, and without an end in sight. Gov. Spitzer,
    following Pataki's previous administrations agenda,and what's
    around the corner??? the threat of eminent domain down our throats,
    driven by lobbyists foreign corporations. Sound familiar??? take a
    look at some of these websites if you need some heart wrenching
    testimony and FACTS about these wind farms and Americas increasing
    loss of civil rights. You spout off about saving the land for
    future generations? This is another HUGE scam, FREE CHEESE!!! come
    and get it, the casualties of war( tax payers) will sit and watch,
    do nothing as usual. http://www.windaction.org/
    http://www.savewesternny.org/

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