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New Generator Boosts Wind Turbine Efficiency 50%

MagnetDroid writes "A startup company based in Vancouver has developed a new kind of generator that could harvest much more energy from the wind. The design could not only lower the cost of wind turbines but increase their power output by 50 percent to as much as 100 percent, in some locations. Normally, when wind speeds drop, a turbine's engine becomes less efficient. The new engine, from ExRo Technologies, runs efficiently over a wider range of conditions. The design replaces a mechanical transmission with what amounts to an electronic one. Magnets attached to a rotating shaft create a current, but individual coils can be turned on and off electronically at different wind speeds." The company will begin field-testing a small, 5KW wind turbine by early next year.

8 of 315 comments (clear)

  1. Same ole, same ole... by MaxwellEdison · · Score: 5, Funny

    Wind energy is a lot like politics and advertising. The more it blows, the more spin you see.

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    -=Bang Bang=-
  2. Re:This perpetual motion machine just keeps gettin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Since when is an increase of efficiency by 100% impossible?

    For arguments sake, let's say that current wind turbines are 10% efficient. This new turbine is therefore 15% to 20% efficient.

    But will this make home wind turbines effective purchases? I doubt it.

    I hope the design can be retrofitted into existing turbines, since there are so many deployed now.

  3. Re:This perpetual motion machine just keeps gettin by Martin+Blank · · Score: 5, Informative

    TFA doesn't mention specific percentage improvements in efficiency. That was kdawson's contribution, and then only in the poorly-worded headline. TFA is claiming that the overall output of a given wind turbine could be boosted by 50% or more by altering the dynamics of the generator to make it more efficient over a wider range of wind speeds.

    Basically, turbines are most efficient at a given speed, and efficiency drops off for anything outside of that, whether faster or slower. This new design attempts to address that by decreasing the amount by which the efficiency drops off at different speeds. The improvement in the efficiency curve boosts overall power output, as the turbine isn't as strictly limited to a given wind speed for peak efficiency as it was before.

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  4. Re:This perpetual motion machine just keeps gettin by Kintanon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's 100% of the maximum possible output of the generator. Not 100% of the energy that comes into it being converted into electricity.

    The words, they MEAN things.

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    Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
  5. Re:Even less dependency on foreign oil by Chris+Burke · · Score: 5, Informative

    But, we are all going to have to get over seeing them as ugly or migratory-bird killers for this program to work.

    And to do my part, I'll point out as I do in most wind turbine threads that windmills are not significant bird killers any more. In fact the very worst wind farm ever, Altamont Pass, killed fewer birds per year than a typical 3-story office building. And that was combining multiple worst-case factors, like an outdated scaffold design that encouraged raptors to nest on them, smaller fast-moving blades that are proven to be more difficult for birds to see and avoid, and a highly disadvantageous location in a choke point for bird migrations.

    Modern wind mills have monolithic poles with rounded tops that birds can't nest or sit on, and have much larger, slower moving blades* that birds can see and avoid. I believe now they also do some cursory environmental studies to make sure they aren't putting the windmills directly in bird migratory paths, but with the other two improvements this probably isn't even that big a deal.

    I'm a bird nerd. I love birds. If you can accept the bird deaths caused by glass windows in cities, windmills are not an issue.

    Oh, and I think they're rather beautiful. :)

    *Largely for efficiency reasons, the bigger the blade the more efficient. IIRC, the way they choose the sizes for windmill blades these days is by what will fit on the largest legally allowed trailer. I've seen convoys of trucks, each with very long trailers, each carrying *one* blade.

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    The enemies of Democracy are
  6. Decent Summary, Thanks by schwaang · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The first thing I wondered was "what makes this design different?"

    Magnets attached to a rotating shaft create a current, but individual coils can be turned on and off electronically at different wind speeds.

    This is a nice, simple explanation of why this design can be kept efficient in a wider range of wind speeds.

    Since we love to bash some of the lamer summaries, I think this one deserves a bump on the plus side.

  7. Re:Even less dependency on foreign oil by RemoWilliams84 · · Score: 5, Funny

    "In fact the very worst wind farm ever, Altamont Pass, killed fewer birds per year than a typical 3-story office building."

    Wow, just think of the bird killing machine we could make if we mounted these windmills on 3-story buildings. I for one welcome less poop on my Humvee. ~

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    "I don't have to think. I only have to do it. The results are always perfect, but that's old news." - Meat Puppets
  8. Re:This perpetual motion machine just keeps gettin by Chris+Burke · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just out of curiousity, and I haven't RTFA yet so maybe the answer is there, but couldn't you vary the pitch of the vanes on the turbine to maintain a constant RPM in varying wind conditions, much the way a constant speed propeller on an airplane works?

    They do that too, even on existing windmills. The problem is that when the wind speed is low, there's nothing you can do to make it go fast, so if you wanted to maintain constant RPM in the generator, you'd have to pitch the blades to give very low speed in high winds, which is rather counter-productive. Adjusting the resistance of the generator so it works across a wider band of RPMs, combined with adjusting blade pitch, provides much better results.

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    The enemies of Democracy are