Monthly Archives: March 2018

Your Questions About Wind Turbines Colorado

Lisa asks…

Is anyone else sick of paying these outrageous gas prices?

With the oil companies making record profits every year, isn’t there something that can be done to regulate the price of gas? Doesn’t anyone realize that if the price gets much higher people will not be able to afford to drive to get to work? Then where will the economy be?

They are reulating steroids in baseball for God’s sake!! while people are going broke just trying to get to work .

admin answers:

There are a number of things that can be done about gas prices. The problem is that there are political, environmental, and legal issues that would have to be overcome to make it happen.

First, we need to reduce dependence on imported oil. As a world wide commodity, changes in oil demand anywhere in the world will impact our prices here. We could reduce oil imports by increasing the use of ethanol. Currently something like 25% of the US corn crop goes to this. However, the downside is that this takes corn out of the stockpile for food (both human and animal feed), which is currently causing famine to break out around the world. We could expand domestic supply, but hat means drilling for oil off the Gulf coast and in a part of ANWAR, which has environmentalists up in arms.

Second, we could improve the distribution of fuel in the US. Currently, there are dozens of gas blends, all mandated by law. It is a tricky thing to supply just enough of each blend, as you cannot use a blend intended for, say, Colorado, in California. So if California goes in need, oil companies cannot shift inventory, they have to shut down refineries, make adjustments, and make more of the California blend. This is a wasteful and expensive process. Far better to have a single blend that all the states can agree on that would allow the fluidity needed in the market. But this is going to be difficult to impossible as the states want THEIR blend and will fight any kind of Federal mandate.

Third, I think we need to encourage those things which will get us away from oil consumption. Not much oil is used for electricity generation, but it can and should be replaced by more efficient, cleaner sources. But nuclear, coal, solar, wind, and hydroelectric all have their own problems as well and each industry will fight hard for their slice of the pie. Most oil is used for vehicle fuel. We need to move to more efficient vehicles and alternative fuel / hybrids, but they are often more expensive than gasoline powered vehicles and some alternate power sources do not have the power necessary for today’s driving. Research needs to be done in fuel cell technology, advanced batteries, and efficient (and safe) hydrogen generation.

I think too many people focus on one thing (conservation, more oil drilling, whatever) and think that alone will solve our problem. They are wrong. It will take a comprehensive approach were everyone will have to give a little for the greater good. Rep. Kennedy is going to have to sacrifice some of his coastal view in MA for wind turbines. Oil companies are going to be allowed to develop domestic sources. States are going to have to grant the feds the power to set uniform fuel standards. This is a lot to ask for, but this and more is what it will take. Anything less then an across the board rethinking of our energy policy will be like slapping a band-aid on a cut artery; just too little to be effective. And if it is ineffective, then expect the President of Iran to be correct when he says that oil is a strategic resource that needs to find its true (and in his mind MUCH higher) price. This is the guy that thinks $200 a barrel for oil is not unreasonable.

Betty asks…

What are some types of wind turbines?

admin answers:

Basically there are only two types, horizontal and vertical axis wind turbines. Here are some links for some more information……

Http://www.eia.doe.gov/kids/energyfacts/sources/renewable/wind.html

http://www.esru.strath.ac.uk/EandE/Web_sites/02-03/zero_emission_bldgs/descripwindturbines.htm

http://www.windmission.dk/workshop/BonusTurbine.pdf

http://www.awea.org/faq/basiccf.html

http://lsa.colorado.edu/essence/texts/wind.htm

Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Your Questions About Wind Turbine Generators How They Work

Mandy asks…

What forms of energy and energy transformations are involved in wind turbines?

Hey
Im doing a research about wind turbines and how it generates energy using wind power
I need to know the energy conversions involved in the process of the wind turbines.
Im not quite sure on what forms of energy are involved

Here are all of the forms of energy:
thermal, electrical, radiant, nuclear potential, gravitation potential, kinetic, elastic potential, sound, and chemical potential.

I also need to know the wind turbines energy transformation equation.
For example a microwave oven,
electrical energy -> radiant energy -> thermal energy

Please help 🙂
help will be greatly appreciated and rewarded with points ofc

admin answers:

The mass and velocity of the air give it KE
The wind turbine blades convert the KE to ME (mechanical energy; the one you left out of your list of ‘all’ the forms of energy…!)
The generator converts the ME to electrical energy, the most useful grade of energy.

At each conversion point, some of the input energy is not used, causing the output energy to be less than the input. For ex: The wind downstream of the blades is slowed, but not stopped. Ergo, it still has some of its KE and the blades have picked up the rest as ME. As I recall, the maximum efficiency of any blade system is about 36%. The ME to EE step is about 90% efficient. Of course, all the efficiencies multiply, so you come out with less than 36%, but considering that the original wind energy is created directly from solar heating of land masses (ie, free), things don’t look so gloomy…….

Mark asks…

How much electricity do wind turbines generate?

Ignoring any technical things like wind speeds and all that, if the blades of a wind turbine magically span at a constant speed of 700RPM, how much electricity would a wind turbine produce? Correct me if I’m wrong but I’m assuming the size of the wind turbine wouldn’t matter in this scenario since all I’m interested in is the speed in which the blades are spinning and how that effects the electricity output.

Thanks in advance!

admin answers:

You know, with all of the conditions you’ve placed in this question, you could have asked, “If a generator spins at 700 RPM, how much electricity will it produce?”

A particular generator spinning at a constant 700 RPM will generate a certain amount of power, but a different generator spinning at the same speed would generate a different amount. Add back in all of the wind turbine stuff, and you get the same answer – “it depends.”

Powered by Yahoo! Answers