Well after my internet went from a dribble to a stagnation, i have spent a long while in the wilderness without my link to fieldlines. I am now in posession of a wonder of modern technology called a ..... come to think of it I don't know what it's called, but it has lifted me from the depths of 600bps to 256000 bytes per second.... It looks bigger if you write it like that:)
So I feel terribly for those still on dial up, and have constructed this story of the African Windpower on Flinders Island with lots of small (30-40k) pictures, and more commentary than necessary, so you can read some dribble while the pictures load.

It shows all the parts of the turbine in detail, and displays some useful food for thought for those who wish to make a drum type mill. It is a very well designed machine, but the one we recieved shows a marked lack of quality control.
straight to part1 of the story.
http://www.otherpower.com/images/scimages/5171/awp_1.html
or: more waffle and background:
This is sad for if they had built it as it was designed to be built, it is in my mind a world beater. It is robust, quiet, slow revving, and should be a thing of beauty for years to come. It pumps out over 1kw with no fuss, little sound, and mild winds.... we have lots of wind here so it delivers more power each day than the average house uses. Most days it produces over 20kwh, and lots of days over 28kwh. Some days not much at all, but these are rare over here. It drives a house with electric hot water, a washing machine that the boss requires to heat it's own water to near boiling point, and all the mod cons available.
It's backed up by a 1kw solar panel and a twin cylinder diesel genny. In winter the solar input is about 5amps/48v for 8hrsmax... so contributes little to the household. Summer is a different story. Even in winter, the mill spends a fair time in dump mode (electric element 1kw). In summer it spends most of the time in dump during the day, and part of the night. It's a damn good machine.....in spite of the builders.
It drives a 24kwh 48v battery bank, and a massive inverter I think 8kwpeak 30seconds 5kw continuous pure sine with data logger and all the flash dodads. It sports a massive toroid to bring it's weight up to over 50kgs... must be good I guess.
Well I've waffled on long enough to give you an idea of it so hope you enjoy the saga... well part one anyway. If there's any interest, I'll write part two... fixin it up
.....oztules