Are you sure you don't mean m/s as opposed to mph?
I just did a sense check on a 14 MW turbine, 222m diameter, 12.7 rpm have 147 m/s or 328 mph.
Are you sure you don't mean m/s as opposed to mph?
Keeping tip speeds subsonic is very important from a noise perspective. But faster rpm needs less gearing, so there's a tradeoff.Marcus wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2024 11:20 amIIRC some of the very early 2 blade windmills did go supersonic, which causes some noise nuisance ( if your standing in the plane of the mill, such that the supersonic tips are travelling towards you then you hear that heavy "thud, thud, thud" as you do when a fast moving helicopter is coming towards you - for the same reason of course: the tip of the advancing blade of the helicopter is going supersonic)
My thought was that they design them to stay below the speed of sound (~750mph? It varies a bit) for that reason. But if they're only up to 550mph I think there's some headroom.
Have you got the datasheet link ?
Countrypaul wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2024 9:00 am
Perhaps that is a motivating factor for the Direct Drive that Siemens are using.
I wonder if the blades could be made in 2 (or more) pieces and fitted togethr on site or even during the assembly phase
See also https://www.gevernova.com/wind-power/of ... de-150-6mw.
Countrypaul wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2024 9:00 am
Perhaps that is a motivating factor for the Direct Drive that Siemens are using.
I wonder if the blades could be made in 2 (or more) pieces and fitted togethr on site or even during the assembly phase
IIRC the transition from carbon or glass fibre to a flanged joint is very difficult to engineer well. If using T-bolts or ribbed "carrots" you need to cut away a lot of the fibres so you need a bigger o/d in that area to compensate. Doing this at the blade root is bad enough, I would not want to do it a second time part way up the blade. A sleeve type joint would be easier but be heavily reliant on the glue(!), I don't know what its fatigue life would be. Aerodynamics are very important so you cannot have fasteners (or anything at all) protruding from a smooth outline.smegal wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2024 4:59 pmCountrypaul wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2024 9:00 am
Perhaps that is a motivating factor for the Direct Drive that Siemens are using.
I wonder if the blades could be made in 2 (or more) pieces and fitted togethr on site or even during the assembly phase
The blades all seem to be in one piece. I was thinking how they'd join them, I was thinking of an internally flanged arrangement like tower sections, or connecting the blade to the hub, but you'd need an operator inside the blade to tighten the nuts up.
I guess for offshore wind, there is less of an advantage to 2 part blades as you don't have to transport by road and you have tall cranes for lifting the nacelle anyway which is WAY heavier.