Wind Turbine: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
==Product Ecology== | ==Product Ecology== | ||
'''Uses''' | '''Uses''' | ||
* | *{{Furnace}} - Steel | ||
* | *{{CNC Multimachine}} - Blades, bearings | ||
* | *{{Generator}} | ||
* | *{{Battery}} | ||
==Components== | ==Components== |
Revision as of 00:43, 24 September 2011
Wind Turbine | ||
---|---|---|
Home | Research & Development | Bill of Materials | Manufacturing Instructions | User's Manual | User Reviews | ![]() |
Overview
The Wind Turbine is a converts kinetic energy from the wind into mechanical and electrical energy. As a part of the GVCS it enables the generation of clean, renewable power.
Details
Small wind turbines are currently the main class being considered as a community-scale solution for power. These turbines may be as small as a fifty watt generator for boat, caravan, or miniature refrigeration unit. Small units often have direct drive generators, direct current output, aeroelastic blades, lifetime bearings and use a vane to point into the wind.
Product Ecology
Uses
Induction Furnace - Steel
Multimachine - Blades, bearings
Electric Motor Generator
Battery
Components
- Blades
- Tail
- Hub
- DC generator
- Battery
- Diode
- Sensors
- Mount
- Wires
- Tower
- Base
- Pole
- Guy-wires
Status
The wind turbine is currently in the Research phase of product development.
There are a wide number of Open Hardware turbines, that are currently under consideration for adoption/consideration as a part of the GVCS.
See also