Thank you for posting your data on your 12G machine, this looks super for a 12' machine. We can relate to your statement above for sure about the 222 blades, they just do not want to stop pulling after a certain speed and load even if like you say they are turned out of the wind.
Thanks Dave. Those blades refuse to stall. The tips stay flying even at very low TSR and they put tremendous twist to the shaft unlike anything I've ever really seen. In really high winds with the rotor turning at decent rpm, but low TSR, this equates to gobs of power when a "normal" airfoil would be stalled and slack off. That's my theory, anyway, on why the power continues to increase even after the machine furls.
Furling it definitely reduces the amount of power but I have yet to see those blades just give up and flat out stall. You take a 60 mph wind speed at 2 TSR and that 12 foot rotor is still running at 280 rpm and it just doesn't give up. And you take the amount of total energy flowing the reduced swept area with it furled at 60 mph, minus the efficiency of the airfoil, and you still get 3 kW easily.
So my advice to anybody building a turbine with GOE222's is that you'd better not scrimp on the generator because these blades will burn it up if you run it in high winds. Saying simply that they're a "high torque" profile is probably the gross understatement of the century. And as testament to that fact, I changed my power bus for 12/24 volt (I made a post on this here
http://fieldlines.com/board/index.php/topic,144888.0.html ) so I could run incoming power at 24 volt and switch it to 12 volt to balance the banks and cut the turbine power during bank balancing. Well, that was a good theory, but I found out that if the turbine is running at 40 amps when the bus switches there's a momentary ~250 amp surge of power as it brakes the turbine and the ammeter will settle in at 75-80 amps @ 12 volt instead of 40 amps @ 24 volt with the rotor running half the rpm that it was in 24 volt. I ain't never seen any other turbine rotor ever do that. Near as I can figure, being the blades have no twist or taper, at a given rpm the station along the airfoil that's operating at optimum angle of attack simply moves further out towards the tip of the blade at slower rpm and they just continue to pull.
They're a really fun blade to fly because they start up at about 3-4 mph and at 6-7 mph you can lean into them pretty hard with the generator and they really don't care.
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Chris