I'm also interested in "Using Furling Control on a Constant Speed Turbine".
I live in a area which is rated between a 2 and 3 (fair to marginal).
I have the breezy 5.5 book as well as the Homebrew Wind Power book.
I have not built any wind turbines yet, so the extent of my knowledge
comes from what I have read. I do have some ideas I'd like to run by
the contributors of this forum.
I am not interested in building a turbine to charge batteries, so the
breezy design appeals to me as I am already hooked up to the grid.
In order to increase the amount of energy harvested from the wind,
I would like to upgrade the breezy's turbine blades to extract more
energy from lower winds. The simplest way to achieve this as I see
it would be to replace the 18 foot 4 bladed rotor with a larger 3 bladed
rotor. If the size of the rotor were increased to a 27 foot diameter 3 blade
rotor, the 14.55 to 1 gear ratio of the gear motor currently used in the
breezy plans would still be the correct ratio needed. (If you were to put
a 3 bladed rotor of the same diameter on the breezy, then you
would need a gear box in the range of about 10 to 1 ratio since the
3 bladed rotor would need to run at a faster rpm to efficiently extract the
same amount of enery from the wind.)
So by installing the larger 3 bladed rotor on the breezy, the unit would
reach its full generating potential of 5.5 kw at @ 18 mph instead of the
current 23 mph. The turbine would begin generating at a lower wind speed also,
starting to run continually at @ 14 to 15 mph instead of 18 mph. These figures
come from using the formulas in the book "Homebrew wind power", so actual
results are prone to vary for the worse or for the better.
A consequence of the above proposed modification is that the larger rotor
could easily overheat the gearmotor/generator in higher winds. It would be
neccesary to furl the tail or use some other standard method to prevent this
and allow the turbine to continue operating at max potenial.
I also have some ideas as to increasing the diameter of the rotor from 18 to
27 feet by making a modified blade hub which would allow the use of the
same blades currently used in the breezy design. One of the attractions of
the breezy design is that the blades are fairy easy to make and it would be
great if they could still be used in the proposed mod.
If the same blades (3 blades) are used but mounted on a much larger hub of 9 foot
dia, with perhaps no blades in the oversize hub area, then the swept area of
- feet ( 572 sq ft) minus the vacant area of the 9 foot dia hub ( 63.5 sq ft) =
- 5 sq ft. This compares with the swept area of 254.34 sq ft for an 18 foot dia
rotor, doubling the sq feet swept.
Like I said earlier, I'm a novice in this field. Do my ideas have merit, or
am I way off the mark?
Please give me some constructive feedback positive or negative.
Clint