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Blade Speed | 14 comments (14 topical)
Re: Blade Speed (3.00 / 0) (#7)
by finnsawyer on Wed Jan 11, 2006 at 10:19:20 AM MST

Amazing or not this is the everyday world of wind power.  You can design your blades for lower TSRs, but then the alternators don't like it.  As you should well know, engineering design always involves compromises.  As it happens, rigid air foils, unlike perhaps sails, can provide lift from a small negative angle of attack to about twelve degrees.  Note that this exceeds your calculated 8.1 degrees.  Well, clearly one can't use twelve degrees at a TSR of seven as the lift will then be acting as a brake.  That's the reason for a four degree angle of attack.  Darn, another compromise.  As one moves toward the root the situation gets better.  Halfway down, the angle between the apparent wind and the blade plane will be 16 degrees, so one could use an attack angle of 12 degrees there, if one wished.  Note that as the mill diameter gets larger the tip speed drops for a given TSR.  It might be useful at this point to mention that both the lift force and drag force increase linearly with the width of the blade.  This would seem to imply that you can increase performance by reducing width to reduce drag.  But then you need to increase lift, which you can do by increasing the angle of attack to 12 degrees, if the geometry and TSR allows you to do so.  This is the reality that your theory needs to address.  
GeoM
[ Parent ]


Re: Blade Speed (3.00 / 0) (#8)
by IntegEner on Wed Jan 11, 2006 at 06:50:57 PM MST

All this wouldn't be but just a few words back and forth except for the grant proposal resubmission in the works here involving funds nearly the same as the prize Paul MacCready of Aerovironment once won for the Gossamer Condor back in 1977 (recently researched). I have arrangements made with facilities and industrial contractors here as a team on this. Somehow I need to get the seriousness of some of this across, despite the nicknames.

The above was my back handed way of saying that the blades on these turbines deserve to be designed well. These high TSRs demand careful work. If anyone wants to see high TSRs take a look at the megawatt-plus turbines.

I honestly don't think that wind energy has answered for itself many of the questions that are being asked not only here but everywhere else as well. The drawn out, patient explanations just aren't holding water. Ask anyone.

I have put together a few wind rotators using ideas that seem to me to be valid and they work quite well on their small scale as are shown in images on the IntegEner-W website. I think I have both recognized good approaches taken by others and taken some worthwhile first steps myself in finding approaches that stress good blade design. Replies welcome but not necessary.

Anthony Chessick
www.integener.com

[ Parent ]



Re: Blade Speed (3.00 / 0) (#9)
by finnsawyer on Thu Jan 12, 2006 at 08:25:50 AM MST

Sounds to me like me you will be in competition with Windstor.  I understand they have a small unit up and running, and are planning 100 kw units.  You have some catching up to do.  Good luck in building a real system providing real power.
GeoM
[ Parent ]


Re: Blade Speed (3.00 / 0) (#10)
by IntegEner on Fri Jan 13, 2006 at 07:42:36 AM MST

WindStor is not competing on this grant to my knowledge. I have met them personally at a trade show along with their Canadian partner, Dermond. They are doing strictly vertical axis while my effort is on a study of aerodynamics that applies to both horizontal and vertical axis. I have small demos that run exceedingly well and demonstrate ultra low blade drag and am now busy making units for others. The vertical axis companies of whom McKenzie Bay and WindStor are together just one of a number worldwide are prime customers for this demo unit, something to show off and even market themselves. If the author of these comments wishes to see the Wind Aerodynamics booklet of IntegEner-W he is welcome to send for a free copy via e-mail in order to make informed decisions about it himself. Power is power and theory is theory, both separately important (and both subject to errors and misinformation). I am frequently asked to try to sell existing wind turbines of a commercial nature but find myself more comfortable, instead, looking at just what it is that makes the blades turn. I believe opportunities exist in this as well. There, I said what has been needing to be said and hope that some of the questions asked of me are by now answered. Like a baseball player out on the playing field, I can be "booed" as well as all the others but have a name and reputation to protect with a few choice words now and then myself.

Anthony Chessick
IntegEner-W
www.integener.com

[ Parent ]



Re: Blade Speed (3.00 / 0) (#11)
by finnsawyer on Fri Jan 13, 2006 at 09:34:42 AM MST

You say you are making units for others.  Considering the paucity of hard data that you present it appears that they are buying 'a pig in a poke'.  You seem to think you can get closer to the Betz limit than the best presently available.  If so, provide the data.  As an engineer, you can figure it out.  Just do the work.  Hype just isn't going to do, and that's all I've seen here.  Define what you mean by 'exceedingly well'.  I suspect anyone putting up a windmill will consider it to be doing exceedingly well when he sees it turn.  And why not?  The velocity cubed term in the wind power equation forgives all manner of shortcomings in design.

As far as drag is concerned, all modern air foils are low drag.  The problem comes about for a high speed horizontal axis windmill, because only a very small fraction of the lift gets converted to usable torque.  This has the effect of amplifying the drag effects relative to what you would find for an airplane wing.  Since lift goes as the apparent wind speed cubed and drag as the apparent wind speed squared, one is probably still better off using a high value of TSR.  A higher TSR also means the alternator turns faster giving better performance there.

You can study the aerodynamics of windmills until Hell freezes over, but, until you actually build a complete system and show that its performance is superior to anything available you are just howling in the wind.

GeoM
[ Parent ]



Re: Blade Speed (3.00 / 0) (#12)
by IntegEner on Sat Jan 14, 2006 at 07:00:27 AM MST

Geez, someone of quite good character who actually thinks I am important enough to warrant what appears to be an unending series of comments......Thanks for the time. It is quite appreciated. I am a poor person, a "church mouse", as they say and don't have the leisure to spend more time on this nor am I even worth it....Thanks again.

Anthony Chessick
www.integener.com

[ Parent ]



Re: Blade Speed (3.00 / 0) (#13)
by finnsawyer on Sat Jan 14, 2006 at 10:14:17 AM MST

Well, I try to be helpful.  One purpose of this site is the exchange of ideas.  If it appears someone is going down a blind alley, shouldn't we call that to their attention?  Some people tend to poo-poo the years of dedicated scientific research that has gone on before.  Others refuse to try to make basic measurements (the Bedini Controvery), and others just don't know how (the Pergomotor Saga).  Why shouldn't we make an effort to help them avoid wasting years of their life pursuing what amounts to a dead end.  

I also can learn things and develop insights based on these little discussions.  I hadn't given much thought to the deflection of the air by propellers, fans, or airplane wings.  It just didn't seem to have any relevance to the behavior of wind mill blades.  Since you thought that it was important, I conceived of a specialized experiment consisting of a long tube shaped wind tunnel with the windmill occupying essentially the entire diameter of the tube.  This eliminates any vortices off of the tip.  There are two possible directions for the air flow behind the blades; straight back, or tangential to the side of the tube.  The latter flow will constitute a vortex and will quickly dissipate against the side of the tube.  The problem is, that it may not exist.  Just because something could be there doesn't mean it has to be there.  Nature has a way of confounding our expectations.  If it doesn't exist your theory, whatever its merits, will have no relevance to the behavior of a horizontal axis windmill.  If it does, the resulting expanding vortex will affect the placement of wind mills in a wind farm.  Perhaps your first proposal should deal with this issue.  Maybe I'll do it myself.  What is the name of the the foundation involved?  I could use a wind tunnel.

GeoM
[ Parent ]



Re: Blade Speed (3.00 / 0) (#14)
by IntegEner on Sun Jan 15, 2006 at 07:21:38 AM MST

It is the state, the State of California in the States. I am just poor, crazy Knucks, the "church mouse in a poke" as my nickname undergoes further adjustments.

Anthony Chessick
IntegEner-W
Tehachapi, CA
www.integener.com

[ Parent ]



Blade Speed | 14 comments (14 topical)

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