Lost my wind generator the other day in some nice winds. I had a pvc threaded coupling as a link between the rotor shaft assembly and the yaw pipe. An accident waiting to happen. It snapped at the threads and the turbine hit the ground breaking one pvc blade. Weird how the alternator part of these things usually survives with just a few scratches.
OK, so I had a set of newly carved 6' wood blades that were supposed to go on my next machine but I had not tried them except for freewheeling in light winds. Visually comparing them freewheeling side by side with my old blades, the new ones were slow to start but in a light wind would soon be spinning faster than the pvc blades. I had to see what the new blades would do with a load. So I transfered rotors and stator from the alt which had just taken up skydiving on to my more robust machine and added the 6' prop. It had been flying with a 5' 4" pvc prop and the alt is a simple little 8" disc, 12 of ED's wedge magnets and a second blank disc to return flux. Stator, 9 coils, 120 turns #22.
Now I knew larger blades would spin slower but since I was capturing more swept area and the blades were upgraded from pvc to wood with a expected TSR of 6 I thought I would have a net gain. Not so, only about 1/2 of what it was doing. OK, I suppose I have a classic case of blades not matched to the alternator. Funny how adding only 8" to the blade diameter would have such an effect. I also wonder if the pvc blades might have had a much higher TSR than I thought.
I can't help thinking that one of the most important things in design is the ratio between the blade rotor and the magnet rotor. My reasoning is that I always see the blade as a second class lever, the rotor shaft as the fulcrum and the magnet placement as the load. Actually it would be the sum total of the blades (levers) and magnets (loads). So I thought the bigger the blade, the less impact the load has on it and the closer it will run as if freewheeling. I expected the larger blades to notice the drag of the alt less and so run faster canceling out the decrease in speed from larger diameter. I would be very interested in any comments on this.
Now I have to say at this point that one change I made was to tighten up the air gap when I reassembled the machine. The change was only about 1/16" and I expected the new larger carved blades to eat this up and spit out more power. It seems that if I open up the air gap at best it will probably match the old results. Arrrgh !
So, I'm thinking to get more out of this alt I should go with smaller blades and also, to make the most of light winds, (8 to 12 mph) go with 5 blades instead of 3. I know that in most cases 3 blades is optimum but can't help thinking there must be a happy medium between slow (water pumper) blades and fast 3 blade rotors if I am targeting a specific range of wind speed. More comments welcomed here.
Now my last question. In another post, Flux recommended that a good match for my new 6' prop might be an alternator with dual rotor, 10" discs, 8 magnets (1" x 2" x 1/2") on each disc, and a 6 coil stator wired star.
I'm wondering,
In light of my pondering's on levers and fulcrums, targeting a wind range of 8 to 12 mph as well as the ease of construction, what if I instead increase the discs to 12", put all 16 magnets on one disc, have the second disc blank and use 12 coils wired star. I wonder how the 2 designs would compare as they would use the same size and amount of magnets, I estimate the amount of wire used would be similar and only the size of the discs increases. Construction would be simpler since I only have to pot 1 magnet rotor.
Well, thanks for reading and I hope you find it interesting enough to comment on.
Andy