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But still, I don't like seeing windmills! There's something about them that smacks of defeatism and retrogression into the past.
The power output of any particular wind farm has a very asymmetric power curve. It produces far more power at high wind speeds than at low. So you would think that the grid's output power would be equally asymmetric.But that's untrue! Because of STATISTICS, specifically the central limit theorem:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_limit_theoremBasically as weather systems move over the UK, the UK's grid averages out the different wind speeds, and you end up with a highly Gaussian distribution of overall power output.
the steam engine is pretty much the same idea as it was 2000 years ago.
,- Countries like Norway can store electricity with extensive hydropower storage- More vertically-challenged and/or desiccated countries have to content themselves with more moderate short-term electricity storage like lithium batteries or flow batteries (or hydrogen storage?) - enough to keep the network running for a few minutes until gas turbines can warm up.
Quote from: wolfekeeper on 12/04/2021 17:50:52The power output of any particular wind farm has a very asymmetric power curve. It produces far more power at high wind speeds than at low. So you would think that the grid's output power would be equally asymmetric.But that's untrue! Because of STATISTICS, specifically the central limit theorem:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_limit_theoremBasically as weather systems move over the UK, the UK's grid averages out the different wind speeds, and you end up with a highly Gaussian distribution of overall power output.The power output of a wind turbine varies with the cube of the wind speed but there are upper limits. The rotor tip must not exceed Mach 1 so you have to feather the blade at high wind speeds to reduce the lift and thus the conversion efficiency. But that increases the drag force which increases with the square of wind speed so at some point you need to turn the blade to zero alpha and stop it rotating, to prevent the blade bending. So the distribution is something of a skewed curve rather than a symmetrical gaussian.
This sounds like a victim of Brexit. Britian has the wind and others have the storage.
I remain to be convinced about the downwind noise of land-based wind farms: the last time I attended a meeting to discuss the noise in a house a mile downwind, the meeting was abandoned because we couldn't hear each other speak. However that problem will not get any worse as all the viable land sites have now been occupied and nobody worries too much about the noise offshore.
More vertically-challenged and/or desiccated countries have to content themselves with more moderate short-term electricity storage like lithium batteries or flow batteries (or hydrogen storage?) - enough to keep the network running for a few minutes until gas turbines can warm up.
If the blade tip will exceed Mach 1 you need to completely redesign the blade, from "glider" to "interceptor" aerofoil, and add a lot of expensive strength. Problem is that interceptors don't generate much lift at low speeds! So you try to get the blade to rotate at constant speed over a wide range of wind speeds, by varying the pitch or adjusting the load. When the wind speed is very high the drag on a rotating blade is higher than that on a stationary one, so you shut down to prevent structural damage.
I've never heard any objectionable sound from any wind turbine.