The big issue, and the major (in my opinion) difference in small scale PV and wind, is maintenance. PV requires virtually 0, not touched my original Fits set up in nearly 13 years except for rinsing the panels maybe half a dozen times. Wind turbines are a different kettle of fish. water ingress into bearings, slip ring failures (hawt), mounting issues (corrosion, mechanical tightness), wear on the blades, especially on the leading edge, the list is endless. Cheap plastic 3D printed blades are not going to last a season anywhere even mildly exposed and spinning at highish speeds will literally fly apart possibly resulting in injury to some innocent passer by (and no I am not a member of the elf n safety gone mad brigade. I love the idea but it will never be worth the effort on a small scale. Those few watts are far more easily, reliably and economically harvested using PV and storage - supercapacitors at low power are excellent.Mr Gus wrote: ↑Wed Jan 11, 2023 12:52 pm Thanks, 10 - 15 watts plus solar top up is one small thru large (boxer) heated dog mat / cat mat in a kennel type environment, which would be helpful specced to be appropriate for small item needs.
Then it comes down to per unit cost & serviceable lifespan.
I know of several animal rescue places located in windier environs (cheap land)
Stables, field shelters, poultry sheds, wildlife hides, firewatch towers & the like where even a trickle of energy may be useful / supplemental.
(firewatch towers are typically 100 ft tall with a tiny cuppola cabin, fire season can be april to september, baking metal sheeting in summer, I could see some low wattage kit being useful after being carried / roped & hoisted.
Example
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton ... -1.5164036
In my opinion its time we forget small "micro turbines" and move on, In the right place a small domestic (>500W turbine) might be worth the effort but small (<100W) micro jobbies forget it - they are nothing more than a passing interest for enthusiastic hobbyists.