h a l f b a k e r yNot the Happy Cuddle Club.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, best, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
The title and subtitle pretty much sum this Idea up. I seem to be living in a place where lots of wind blows at this time of the year, and not so much at other times. So, if a bunch of windmills could be set up here, and removed to a different windy location when the season changes, a major generic
problem for windmills could be solved.
Some variations on the theme are worth describing in a little more detail. For example, we could prepare a region of the landscape with "mounts". Each mount would be a thing onto which a windmill tower could be attached.
We'd also prepare attachment points to the power grid. We wouldn't necessarily build energy conversion equipment (from the type of power a windmill generates, to something steady for the power grid) at this site; that's pretty expensive stuff and could be made as portable as the windmills.
With several such sites prepared, to be used as the prevailing winds change, we save quite a bit of expense associated with idle windmills.
Thai Windmill
http://www.flickr.c...arkroom/2269831275/ Like old-fashioned western mindmills, Thai windmills have detachable sails. That might be an easier thing to move (or furl and unfurl), than the whole windmill. [DrCurry, Feb 20 2008]
Thai Windmill In "Off" Position
http://www.flickr.c...arkroom/2269831953/ Sails stowed. Oh, and technically these are "windpumps," since they are used to pump sea water in salt making, but if I called them that, no one would know what I meant. [DrCurry, Feb 20 2008]
Skyscraper Windmills, by [UnaBubba]
Skyscraper_20Windmills May 26, 2001 [UnaBubba, Feb 22 2008]
Wind turbines designed into buildings
http://www.newscien...rticle.ns?id=dn1292 September 14, 2001 [UnaBubba, Feb 22 2008]
Windmill Scale
http://www.millenic...4/18-10Windmill.jpg note the pickup near the base [DanDaMan, Feb 25 2008]
Some facts about those big windmills
http://www.mge.com/environment/wind/ Yup, they are big, each and every one. [Vernon, Feb 26 2008]
Heavy lifter airships
http://www.ilcdover...fense/heavylift.htm That first one could pick one of those big windmills up, tower and all. [Vernon, Feb 26 2008]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Destination URL.
E.g., http://www.coffee.com/
Description (displayed with the short name and URL.)
|
| |
Given the costs of manpower to move the windmills, I have a suspicion that there would be little economic advantage to simply installing windmills in both places and leaving them there. Do idle windmills have any real expense associated with them? |
|
| |
But I also believe that the long-term success of wind power will rely on smaller, portable windmills. We need to come up with designs that householders can implement, on rooftops or in gardens or backyards (and I note that some people are already taking this tack). |
|
| |
Don Quixotes' grave is tilting. |
|
| |
[DrCurry], any moderately large windmill can only pay for the cost of building it if the wind is blowing. Idle, it just racks up property taxes. I'd think that if this Idea is implemented, they'd design it for easy transportation and assembly. |
|
| |
How does the site not incur property taxes simply because the windmill is absent?! |
|
| |
[DrCurry], the expense of building a windmill, plus operating expenses, such as taxes for the land it occupies, can only be paid off if the thing is operating to produce energy. That obviously means it needs to operate as much as possible. I admit there is an assumption here that if it does operate as much as possible, certain additional operating expenses can be covered (extra land taxes and moving expenses), plus it logically figures that a smaller and more transportable windmill will produce less energy than a large one --but it will also cost less to build in the first place. So, this Idea is Half-Baked because the trade-offs need to be properly analyzed, to be sure it can work. |
|
| |
Move somehere that has no property taxes? We don't have them in Oz... of course, we don't have the option of tax deductability of mortgage interest, either, so it's 6.5 of one or half a baker's dozen of the other. |
|
| |
I believe that wind is almost constant at slightly higher altitude... around 500-1000 feet above ground level. The solution would then seem to be bigger windmills, not smaller. That's why I posted [link3] which was almost identical to an idea fromGermany in New Scientist a couple of months later [link4]. |
|
| |
If someplace else has better wind why not just build it there in the first place? If you are gonna try to catch every gust you would be moving hundreds of tons of steel around every few minutes which is gonna require a lot more energy than you produce. |
|
| |
[DanDaMan], there is a focus here on seasonal wind patterns, although not stated so explicitly in the main text as in this anno. |
|
| |
I think *this* is what the halfbakery is all about! |
|
| |
Catch this moving croissant. + |
|
| |
I still don't see how even seasonal energy benefits could outweigh the cost of dismantling and trucking these windmills around. They are enormous. I don't think you quite understand the size of these. So I put up a picture to illustrate. It would take a fleet of flatbeds to move it piece by piece. |
|
| |
[DanDaMan], nice picture; I admit I didn't know that wind farm windmills were quite that large (knew that single mills have tended toward the extreme, though). |
|
| |
Perhaps the poles should stay in place, while the blades and generator are moved. I found a reference indicating that the generator nacelle can easily weigh 20 tons (English not metric tons), and the rotor blades (all on one windmill) can weigh another 7 tons or so. |
|
| |
There are still ways to haul such loads. Some cargo airships (blimps with extra rotors) can carry 160 tons. I've added a couple of links. |
|
| |
Again, the subject of transportation cost comes up..I can't imagine the property tax of the windmills being higher than the cost of having an engineering team dismantle the windmill (using very heavy equipment - large cranes aren't cheap), then transport it by air, then reassemble it (again with the heavy machinery) at the new site. And this is for one single windmill..don't you need a field of them to be economically feasible? I really like the idea, but I couldn't quite make it work in my head. |
|
| |
Admittedly my head is quite small, so don't take my word for it. The idea of building permanent windmills at the proper sites still seems to make more sense imo. Hope this idea works out somehow tho^^ |
|
| |
Umm, the difference between a metric tonne and an English [sic] ton is just 40 pounds. I assume you meant a short, or U.S. ton, at 2000 lb, which is 200 lb short of a tonne and 240 lb short of a ton, [Vernon]? |
|
| |
This idea is not viable, BTW, irrespective of the measurement you use. |
|
| |
A better idea, then, would be to transport the wind to the mills. |
|
| |
Hey - it is as viable as the original idea. |
|
| |
Would not "Flocking Windmills" make more
sense? |
|
| |
I once watched a crew of three men assemble a huge pre-fabricated survey tower in less than four hours...it was 75 feet tall and they used no heavy equipment...just an electric winch they had on their pickup. |
|
| |
I believe, with the proper engineering, a viably large wind turbine could be efficiently erected in very short time. Transportation costs would certainly be a factor. However, we are facing a time of ever increasing energy costs which may make this idea more practical. |
|
| |
Consider the huge wheat harvester convoys we see in Nebraska and Kansas. The equipment these contract harvesters move is not only massive but unbelievably expensive. I see no reason contract electric wind generation companies would not prove profitable. I can understand that the mega watt 500 ft tall generators may not be portable, but certainly hundred or hundred and fifty footers are of practical capacity and could be erected on poster's pre-fabricated pads with pre-installed electrical connections to the grid and properly constructed anchor points for stabilization. So, the equipment, in my mind, is very viable from an engineering stand point. |
|
| |
Considering the seasonal and geographic varainces of the wind, I think this is probably a very good idea. If I had about 300 million available in risk capital, I would probably try a pilot project. Regardless, it would be a hell of a tax write-off. |
|
| |
This could, actually, work really well.
The turbines could be mounted on the
back of large, flatbed trucks; as long as
the trailer bed was pointed into the
wind, its length would give it enough
stability. The trucks would need to be
as large as is legally allowed on the
public highway, though they could only
travel on bridge-free routes. |
|
| |
Then, just drive the trucks back and
forth across the country at about
40mph and harvest all that free
electricity. |
|
| |
Mount them on ships at sea. |
|
| |
You must be talking about some pretty small wind gennies. |
|
| |
The typical windfarm ones I've been seeing start at a hundred feet to the genhead and only get bigger. The smallest ones around here are the first three from the pilot program; they're about 120' tall. The big ones are about 250' at the genhead. You ain't trucking that nowhere. |
|
| |
Vernon's got a few big trucks - and a lot of hot air to make them buoyant. |
|
| |