How to Build a 17-ft Wind Turbine
agentfive writes "The people over at Treehugger have found an amazing little article on how to build a 17ft - 3kW+ output Wind Turbine. Apparently this is the latest project of OtherPower.com and the site has a variety of other engergy saving/producing projects including a Homebrew Maytag Gas Battery charger."
"One of my lifelong goals is to live simply, on a large plot of undeveloped land somewhere. I'm glad there are people like the Otherpower folks who are paving the way..."
Ah, irony.
How many birds would be saved by replacing coal burning powerplants with wind turbines?
Most of them. In 100 years when greenhouse gasses kill everything, birds will wish they had windmills.
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Even if you had a giant wind turbine that was 1/4 mile high and across your still using less than 1% of the total wind power available at that point vertically in the atmosphere.
If they start making large fields of 1000+ foot hight turbines I might start worring about the environmental effects. For now a small forest I'm sure has far much more effect on wind resistance than a field of turbines.
Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
You'd rather be reading about Google and Apple? This is truly 'news for nerds'. I for one welcome our new DIY overlords.
Of course, these are all simply educated guesses on my part, as I am not a climate researcher (my science background is primarily in solid state physics). I could easily be mistaken.
*** Quantum Mechanics: The Dreams of Which Stuff is Made ***
Yes, but at $157.50 per 17-Watt panel, you're looking at $9264/KW. At $.10/KWH, you would need nearly 100,000 hours to break even. If you could get 8 hours at 17W per day, you would need 32.5 years to break even.
That's just not practical.
"It's producing quite a bit more power than I can really use"
It seems that their methodology is consistent with their goals. Sure it's not as efficient as it could be, but they've achieved what they set out to do.
Not bad, in my opinion.