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As in the big white things that are becoming quite common, why do they shut down? If its maintenance that is not very good.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 11/04/2021 07:44:07As in the big white things that are becoming quite common, why do they shut down? If its maintenance that is not very good.Many of the inland ones were badly placed, not enough wind to keep them going all the time.They will also shut down if wind speed is too high to prevent damage. Otherwise, I assume maintenance.
Some windmills (or farms) may not yet have been commissioned.There are also instances where there is "too much" electricity, outside peak hours.- Sometimes this is because the transmission lines are already overloaded- Sometimes regulators guarantee a certain amount of capacity to nuclear or coal, which can't shut down or start up quickly- Sometimes electricity markets allocate wholesale electricity generating capacity based on price bids to deliver the demanded capacity. Electricity from wind is almost free (there is some wear and tear on an operating windmill). But sometimes, the wholesale price can go even lower than this....
Wind farming is mostly about drawing subsidies from the users of reliable sources of electricity. In summer, it is common for wind farmers to receive subsidies for not generating electricity: if demand drops below 20% of peak (surprisingly common!) it is preferable to subsidise windmills than to run down nuclear plant, which takes a long time to switch on again.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 11/04/2021 07:44:07As in the big white things that are becoming quite common, why do they shut down? If its maintenance that is not very good. Why isn't it? Maintenance of the gearbox is one cause. Obviously if there's not enough wind then they will all shut down locally. If they're undergoing maintenance some small proportion of the time, that's no big deal. ALL power plants need some maintenance sometimes.
there is no point installing more (windmills) if energy cannot be relied on and no way to store it
So existing generation types are still a necessity.
The fact that wind is unreliable is a good reason to install more windmills in more diverse locations.
It is a serious question whether the UK, one of the windiest populated areas of the planet, could be powered by renewables at an economic cost.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 11/04/2021 21:26:26So existing generation types are still a necessity. And always will be until someone devises the means to store 5 days' worth of electricity at winter consumption levels, because 5 days with no wind is pretty common. And of course you need to install four times the anticipated peak load capacity so that you can recharge the store at the same time as supplying actual demand, during the next 5 days. Why four times? Because wind generators rarely deliver more than 50% of rated output. There's a very narrow band of windspeeds between rated output and shutdown to prevent blade damage.
But now we have modern science. Surely this can enable us to devise better, more efficient and reliable sources of energy than anachronistic windmills.
Quote from: charles1948 on 12/04/2021 18:23:55But now we have modern science. Surely this can enable us to devise better, more efficient and reliable sources of energy than anachronistic windmills. It has.The ones that we are building are a vast improvement on the old ones.On the other hand, the internal combustion engine hasn't changed much in 160 years and the steam engine is pretty much the same idea as it was 2000 years ago.
How about nuclear fusion?Is that futuristic enough?
It's just a matter of making very small fusion bombs,
Does anyone share my visceral dislike of the idea, that in the 21st century, we should be building windmills?Doesn't it strike any scientifically-minded person, as a deplorable throw-back to the medieval ages. When "windmills" were one of the best of the only energy-sources available. In those pre-scientific times.But now we have modern science. Surely this can enable us to devise better, more efficient and reliable sources of energy than anachronistic windmills. The deficiencies of which have been well pointed out by previous posters.I live in Brighton, on the south coast of England. Just off the coast, out to sea, there seems to be a whole collection of windmills.In a "windmill farm", as the term is. I've glimpsed them with my naked eye, but have never cared to look at them with binoculars or a telescope, to verify whether they're really there, or just a mirage.That's because I don't like the sight or even the thought of them. They are repellent.Whereas if a modern 21st-century nuclear power-station were built off the coast. I could look at that all day with admiration and delight!Am I the only one to be thinking this way?
But still, I don't like seeing windmills! There's something about them that smacks of defeatism and retrogression into the past.