Windymill question
Discussion
s2art said:
Anyone on here know much about windmills? I was wondering how the power generated can be brought into phase with the grid. You would think that the harder the wind blows the faster they turn. Do they generate DC which is then converted?
I was under the impression that they disn't work that way and that they power was used to pump water uphill to be released later when electricity was required from the grid. May be completely wrong.Horse_Apple said:
s2art said:
Anyone on here know much about windmills? I was wondering how the power generated can be brought into phase with the grid. You would think that the harder the wind blows the faster they turn. Do they generate DC which is then converted?
I was under the impression that they disn't work that way and that they power was used to pump water uphill to be released later when electricity was required from the grid. May be completely wrong.s2art said:
Anyone on here know much about windmills? I was wondering how the power generated can be brought into phase with the grid. You would think that the harder the wind blows the faster they turn. Do they generate DC which is then converted?
~700V 3-phase generators on the big ones I think. They feed into essentially a little substation that steps it up to 10's of kV to squirt into the local grid. Most of them run at effectively constant speed by varying the blade angles.hairykrishna said:
s2art said:
Anyone on here know much about windmills? I was wondering how the power generated can be brought into phase with the grid. You would think that the harder the wind blows the faster they turn. Do they generate DC which is then converted?
~700V 3-phase generators on the big ones I think. They feed into essentially a little substation that steps it up to 10's of kV to squirt into the local grid. Most of them run at effectively constant speed by varying the blade angles.So the power rating for these beasts is measured where?
s2art said:
hairykrishna said:
s2art said:
Anyone on here know much about windmills? I was wondering how the power generated can be brought into phase with the grid. You would think that the harder the wind blows the faster they turn. Do they generate DC which is then converted?
~700V 3-phase generators on the big ones I think. They feed into essentially a little substation that steps it up to 10's of kV to squirt into the local grid. Most of them run at effectively constant speed by varying the blade angles.So the power rating for these beasts is measured where?
elster said:
s2art said:
hairykrishna said:
s2art said:
Anyone on here know much about windmills? I was wondering how the power generated can be brought into phase with the grid. You would think that the harder the wind blows the faster they turn. Do they generate DC which is then converted?
~700V 3-phase generators on the big ones I think. They feed into essentially a little substation that steps it up to 10's of kV to squirt into the local grid. Most of them run at effectively constant speed by varying the blade angles.So the power rating for these beasts is measured where?
Actually finding out what percentage of capacity is actually generated is hard

eldar said:
elster said:
s2art said:
hairykrishna said:
s2art said:
Anyone on here know much about windmills? I was wondering how the power generated can be brought into phase with the grid. You would think that the harder the wind blows the faster they turn. Do they generate DC which is then converted?
~700V 3-phase generators on the big ones I think. They feed into essentially a little substation that steps it up to 10's of kV to squirt into the local grid. Most of them run at effectively constant speed by varying the blade angles.So the power rating for these beasts is measured where?
Actually finding out what percentage of capacity is actually generated is hard

The really big f

These were the rough numbers given in a talk I went to, by a man from Siemens.
s2art said:
Parrot of Doom said:
s2art said:
Parrot of Doom said:
Windmills don't generate electricity, they are fed from the grid and create the wind. Without windmills the clouds wouldn't move.
I suspected as much.Nope.
elster said:
eldar said:
elster said:
s2art said:
hairykrishna said:
s2art said:
Anyone on here know much about windmills? I was wondering how the power generated can be brought into phase with the grid. You would think that the harder the wind blows the faster they turn. Do they generate DC which is then converted?
~700V 3-phase generators on the big ones I think. They feed into essentially a little substation that steps it up to 10's of kV to squirt into the local grid. Most of them run at effectively constant speed by varying the blade angles.So the power rating for these beasts is measured where?
Actually finding out what percentage of capacity is actually generated is hard

The really big f

These were the rough numbers given in a talk I went to, by a man from Siemens.
elster said:
eldar said:
elster said:
s2art said:
hairykrishna said:
s2art said:
Anyone on here know much about windmills? I was wondering how the power generated can be brought into phase with the grid. You would think that the harder the wind blows the faster they turn. Do they generate DC which is then converted?
~700V 3-phase generators on the big ones I think. They feed into essentially a little substation that steps it up to 10's of kV to squirt into the local grid. Most of them run at effectively constant speed by varying the blade angles.So the power rating for these beasts is measured where?
Actually finding out what percentage of capacity is actually generated is hard

The really big f

These were the rough numbers given in a talk I went to, by a man from Siemens.
eldar said:
s2art said:
Parrot of Doom said:
Windmills don't generate electricity, they are fed from the grid and create the wind. Without windmills the clouds wouldn't move.
I suspected as much.We all are..........

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