Hey everyone i have been looking through the site for a year or so now, and some friends and i have started a project. We are building our first wind turbine. We want to add to it by creating a weather station that records wind speed and direction. The genny is 3phase with 40 magnets (20 per rotor) and 15 coils. The weather station is still being designed as we build it. It is going to utilize a freescale 68hc12 microcontroller and a pc running a C# application. The speed will be recorded using a spinning disk and Infrared LED's. The disk will allow a set number of pulses to be transmitted to the microcontroller every repitition. The direction will be determined by similar means. A four bit grey code position encoder will be used. the wheel will have four bit grey code that will translate the position into 4bit binary that the microcontroller can understand. This information will be sent to a pc via serial port. A C# application will listen for incoming values and record them. The C# program will then create a real time graph and give the user the ability to graph archived values. This will allow us to monitor performance over periods of time and compare data from different stators.
As most people are more interested in the turbines themselves i will leave out all of the programming. Anyone who is interested on how we will accomplish this feel free to ask. We have been pretty busy with other things so our progress is slow but steady. At this point we have a few coils wrapped, the alternator almost complete, charge controller is being assembled, weather station is being built, microcontroller program is partially functional, and the C# app is bare bones.
Here is the the alternator with on rotor attached. The magnets were placed with a piece of plywood. The bearing is from from a late 80's chevy (i think). The steel was donated and machined from a local mill.
Open circuit voltage when hand turned and using #16 wire (first coil & hand wound) was around 3V, short circuit current test was around 3A. I will post some better data once we get more the other test coils finished.
This is the first testing of the jacking screws. They worked very well and allowed for a slow decent and easy removal of the second rotor. The same coil had an open circuit voltage of 9V, and s.c. current of 3A. The current was still lower because it isnt mounted to anything and is difficult to spin.
Wound some coils at work. The first is #20 with 465 turns. I also finished a #12 with 85 turns today. I want to make three #16 coils. two will have matching thickness but different diameter, and the third will have a matching diameter and a different diameter. I will post the results once i have completed some testing. I want to use either a drill press or lathe to get a steady rpm. and give my arm a rest.
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The coils are being sealed with a basic enamel. i coat the outer diameter and later pull one end of the plexiglass of and apply some more. The wood clamps prevent the coil from expanding while the enamel sets.
I grabbed some scrap copper from work to make some L-brackets.
The enclosure is made of smoked plexiglass. The front pane will be transparent and have quick disconnects for the I/O. The microncontroller will be mounted below.