This is going to be a challenge for me because I am not good at figuring out how to make a tabular data presentation on this board. But I have been working on this for many weeks and I think I have good output data on my 3.8 meter machine with ferrite magnets.
First - how is the data logged? Crude, really. I have a recording anemometer that records the wind speed for a logging period. It stores how much time in hours and minutes the wind spends at each increment of wind speed and averages all this data in computer software to supply an average for the logging period. During that time I record kWh output of the turbine. I divide the output in kWh by the hours and minutes in the logging period and that is the average output in watts for that average wind speed.
Some day maybe I'll invest in a APRS or a logger like Hugh has. But for the present, that is how I do it. It is important to realize that doing it my way is crude and the data may not be 100% accurate. But it's "close enough" to give a general idea of what the turbine is capable of.
I have three machines with these generators on. The prototype one shown in this thread had a conglomeration of stuff. It was tested as a single phase. Then I stacked two phases on it. Then I replaced the three blade rotor with a four. I played with furling. I'm constantly fiddling with that turbine because it's on a tower that's easy to raise and lower (I never take the gin off it) and it's my test machine. That prototype generator has one stator with 50 turns, the other with 53. I found out that's pointless. It works the best if the stators are evenly loaded. The "improved" version of it has 51 turns in both stators. And that is the one I took this data from.
The machine spec: 3.8 meter (12.5 foot) rotor. Gottingen 222 airfoils with 10 degree pitch, 158 mm chord, no twist, no taper. .4375 gear ratio, meaning for every revolution of the rotor, the generator turns 2.28 times. 51 turns of 1.8 mm (13 AWG) wire. 24 volt system.
Now to see if I can make a table:
Wind Speed | Watts |
3.0 | 64 |
4.0 | 171 |
5.0 | 272 |
6.0 | 411 |
7.0 | 644 |
8.0 | 917 |
9.0 | 1209 |
10.0 | 1522 |
11.0 | 1799 |
12.0 | 1926 |
13.0 | 2285 |
I have the furling cranked up on this machine just to see if I can burn a stator out. So far I haven't, even in 20 m/s wind. But I consider this generator good for 1,500 watts sustained. And by sustained I mean for days at a time at that power level. I take the maximum amp capacity of the magnet wire, divide it by 1.15 and that is my maximum continuous. That designs a 1.15 service factor into the winding to insure that it will hold up when the wind really blows. My newest 4.0 meter machine has 2 mm (12 AWG) wire in the stators. But that machine is not fully tested yet.
The ferrite dual stator generator is more power efficient than the neo that I originally had on this machine by about 8-9% at higher outputs. So it creates less heat, puts more power down the tower, and is more robust than the neo delta one I had on it before. Another consideration in my data is that our wind rarely averages in the 10-13 m/s range. For some reason it's either below that, or when we get our Norwesters it's way above like 15-20 m/s and any trees that are not strong are laying all over and have to be cut up for firewood. I have to extrapolate there by taking readings off the anemometer and compare against the watt meter several times, then average them to arrive at a reasonable output number. Like I said, maybe sometime I'll invest in one of those high-dollar loggers. But for now that's the way I do it.
In the above table, the furling is really starting to "kick in" around 11.0 m/s. At 13 m/s this machine is pretty much folded up completely. Another consideration is that with the dual stator, each stator is only carrying half the load, or supplying half the total power. So you have to divide by two to see what each stator is delivering at each wind speed.
These ferrite generators have proven to be the most robust and power efficient generators I have ever built, even though they're quite heavy.
--
Chris