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Inspiration for Homebuilders



 
 
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  #1  
Old May 26th 09, 12:57 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Brian Whatcott
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 915
Default Inspiration for Homebuilders

This is a pointer to a home build 20 ft diam windmill on a 70 ft pole.
It features three 10 ft long laminated red cedar blades and nice looking
generator, tower couplings and gin....


http://www.otherpower.com/20page1.html

Brian W

(Thanks to Larry for the pointer on rec.boats)
  #2  
Old May 26th 09, 04:06 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Orval Fairbairn[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 530
Default Inspiration for Homebuilders

In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

This is a pointer to a home build 20 ft diam windmill on a 70 ft pole.
It features three 10 ft long laminated red cedar blades and nice looking
generator, tower couplings and gin....


http://www.otherpower.com/20page1.html

Brian W

(Thanks to Larry for the pointer on rec.boats)


I hope that you have good lightning suppression!

--
Remove _'s from email address to talk to me.
  #3  
Old May 27th 09, 02:01 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Brian Whatcott
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 915
Default Inspiration for Homebuilders

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

This is a pointer to a home build 20 ft diam windmill on a 70 ft pole.
It features three 10 ft long laminated red cedar blades and nice looking
generator, tower couplings and gin....


http://www.otherpower.com/20page1.html

Brian W

(Thanks to Larry for the pointer on rec.boats)


I hope that you have good lightning suppression!


Ha! I noticed the maker specified a blade angle of 3 degrees at the
tips, increasing to (approaching) 9 degrees at the roots.
It took me a little while to get my head round this. The maker mentioned
the blades are set flat (undersurface) forward into the wind, and I
think he mentioned a target rotation rate of 65 rpm.
I imagine he was thinking of an AoA of 15 degrees at the rated wind. The
tips do a revolution in pi x 20 ft = 63 ft per rev - so the rotation
rate at 65 rpm would give a tip speed of 65rpm X 63ft/rev X 60 min/hr /
5280 ft/mile or 47 mph.

I guess the pitch angle for zero AoA at the starting windspeed 16 mph
would be atan 16/47 = 19 degrees from the plane of revolution, so for 15
deg AoA the pitch angle might be 4 degrees from the plane of revolution
at the tips.
And he mentions 3 degrees. But getting up to speed with stalled blades
would be an issue...
What's your take, Orville?


Regards

Brian W
  #4  
Old May 27th 09, 02:53 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Brian Whatcott
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 915
Default Inspiration for Homebuilders

Brian Whatcott wrote:
Orval Fairbairn wrote:


What's your take,

Orval

XXXOrville?XXX
(sorry 'bout that!)


Regards

Brian W

  #5  
Old May 27th 09, 03:26 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Orval Fairbairn[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 530
Default Inspiration for Homebuilders

In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

This is a pointer to a home build 20 ft diam windmill on a 70 ft pole.
It features three 10 ft long laminated red cedar blades and nice looking
generator, tower couplings and gin....


http://www.otherpower.com/20page1.html

Brian W

(Thanks to Larry for the pointer on rec.boats)


I hope that you have good lightning suppression!


Ha! I noticed the maker specified a blade angle of 3 degrees at the
tips, increasing to (approaching) 9 degrees at the roots.
It took me a little while to get my head round this. The maker mentioned
the blades are set flat (undersurface) forward into the wind, and I
think he mentioned a target rotation rate of 65 rpm.
I imagine he was thinking of an AoA of 15 degrees at the rated wind. The
tips do a revolution in pi x 20 ft = 63 ft per rev - so the rotation
rate at 65 rpm would give a tip speed of 65rpm X 63ft/rev X 60 min/hr /
5280 ft/mile or 47 mph.

I guess the pitch angle for zero AoA at the starting windspeed 16 mph
would be atan 16/47 = 19 degrees from the plane of revolution, so for 15
deg AoA the pitch angle might be 4 degrees from the plane of revolution
at the tips.
And he mentions 3 degrees. But getting up to speed with stalled blades
would be an issue...
What's your take, Orville?


Regards

Brian W


My first take is that you misspelled my name.

We had a big windmill on our farm when I was growing up. The plane of
rotation was parallel to the wind, rather than at a right angle. The fan
acted more as a wind turbine than a propeller. IIRC, the fan had about a
dozen curved steel blades. It also had a brake on it for when the winds
got too high.

--
Remove _'s from email address to talk to me.
  #6  
Old May 27th 09, 05:16 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
jerry wass
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 180
Default Inspiration for Homebuilders

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

This is a pointer to a home build 20 ft diam windmill on a 70 ft pole.
It features three 10 ft long laminated red cedar blades and nice looking
generator, tower couplings and gin....


http://www.otherpower.com/20page1.html

Brian W

(Thanks to Larry for the pointer on rec.boats)
I hope that you have good lightning suppression!

Ha! I noticed the maker specified a blade angle of 3 degrees at the
tips, increasing to (approaching) 9 degrees at the roots.
It took me a little while to get my head round this. The maker mentioned
the blades are set flat (undersurface) forward into the wind, and I
think he mentioned a target rotation rate of 65 rpm.
I imagine he was thinking of an AoA of 15 degrees at the rated wind. The
tips do a revolution in pi x 20 ft = 63 ft per rev - so the rotation
rate at 65 rpm would give a tip speed of 65rpm X 63ft/rev X 60 min/hr /
5280 ft/mile or 47 mph.

I guess the pitch angle for zero AoA at the starting windspeed 16 mph
would be atan 16/47 = 19 degrees from the plane of revolution, so for 15
deg AoA the pitch angle might be 4 degrees from the plane of revolution
at the tips.
And he mentions 3 degrees. But getting up to speed with stalled blades
would be an issue...
What's your take, Orville?


Regards

Brian W


My first take is that you misspelled my name.

We had a big windmill on our farm when I was growing up. The plane of
rotation was parallel to the wind, rather than at a right angle. The fan
acted more as a wind turbine than a propeller. IIRC, the fan had about a
dozen curved steel blades. It also had a brake on it for when the winds
got too high.

The blades were turned sideways (parallel to the tail) if they didn't
want it to pump any water---If you needed water you operated the lever
that placed the blades perpendicular to the rudder, tail,
whatever,-pointing into the wind, then you got some POWER..---OR--
did you have one of those weird looking things where the blades were
raked back severely at an angle about like the back 2/3 of a snowcone
cup? Jerry
  #7  
Old May 27th 09, 05:13 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Orval Fairbairn[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 530
Default Inspiration for Homebuilders

In article ,
Jerry Wass wrote:

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

This is a pointer to a home build 20 ft diam windmill on a 70 ft pole.
It features three 10 ft long laminated red cedar blades and nice looking
generator, tower couplings and gin....


http://www.otherpower.com/20page1.html

Brian W

(Thanks to Larry for the pointer on rec.boats)
I hope that you have good lightning suppression!

Ha! I noticed the maker specified a blade angle of 3 degrees at the
tips, increasing to (approaching) 9 degrees at the roots.
It took me a little while to get my head round this. The maker mentioned
the blades are set flat (undersurface) forward into the wind, and I
think he mentioned a target rotation rate of 65 rpm.
I imagine he was thinking of an AoA of 15 degrees at the rated wind. The
tips do a revolution in pi x 20 ft = 63 ft per rev - so the rotation
rate at 65 rpm would give a tip speed of 65rpm X 63ft/rev X 60 min/hr /
5280 ft/mile or 47 mph.

I guess the pitch angle for zero AoA at the starting windspeed 16 mph
would be atan 16/47 = 19 degrees from the plane of revolution, so for 15
deg AoA the pitch angle might be 4 degrees from the plane of revolution
at the tips.
And he mentions 3 degrees. But getting up to speed with stalled blades
would be an issue...
What's your take, Orville?


Regards

Brian W


My first take is that you misspelled my name.

We had a big windmill on our farm when I was growing up. The plane of
rotation was parallel to the wind, rather than at a right angle. The fan
acted more as a wind turbine than a propeller. IIRC, the fan had about a
dozen curved steel blades. It also had a brake on it for when the winds
got too high.

The blades were turned sideways (parallel to the tail) if they didn't
want it to pump any water---If you needed water you operated the lever
that placed the blades perpendicular to the rudder, tail,
whatever,-pointing into the wind, then you got some POWER..---OR--
did you have one of those weird looking things where the blades were
raked back severely at an angle about like the back 2/3 of a snowcone
cup? Jerry


Neither. The fan was 10-12 ft diameter, fixed so the wind would always
turn the fan. Since the blades were curved (cambered), the advancing
blade had less drag than the receding blade. I think it was a
Fairbanks-Morse product, but don't hold me to that, and it was built
about 1910.

A lot of windmills in our area (Northern Illinois) were of similar
design.

--
Remove _'s from email address to talk to me.
  #8  
Old May 28th 09, 01:01 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Charlie[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 56
Default Inspiration for Homebuilders

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Jerry Wass wrote:

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

This is a pointer to a home build 20 ft diam windmill on a 70 ft pole.
It features three 10 ft long laminated red cedar blades and nice looking
generator, tower couplings and gin....


http://www.otherpower.com/20page1.html

Brian W

(Thanks to Larry for the pointer on rec.boats)
I hope that you have good lightning suppression!

Ha! I noticed the maker specified a blade angle of 3 degrees at the
tips, increasing to (approaching) 9 degrees at the roots.
It took me a little while to get my head round this. The maker mentioned
the blades are set flat (undersurface) forward into the wind, and I
think he mentioned a target rotation rate of 65 rpm.
I imagine he was thinking of an AoA of 15 degrees at the rated wind. The
tips do a revolution in pi x 20 ft = 63 ft per rev - so the rotation
rate at 65 rpm would give a tip speed of 65rpm X 63ft/rev X 60 min/hr /
5280 ft/mile or 47 mph.

I guess the pitch angle for zero AoA at the starting windspeed 16 mph
would be atan 16/47 = 19 degrees from the plane of revolution, so for 15
deg AoA the pitch angle might be 4 degrees from the plane of revolution
at the tips.
And he mentions 3 degrees. But getting up to speed with stalled blades
would be an issue...
What's your take, Orville?


Regards

Brian W
My first take is that you misspelled my name.

We had a big windmill on our farm when I was growing up. The plane of
rotation was parallel to the wind, rather than at a right angle. The fan
acted more as a wind turbine than a propeller. IIRC, the fan had about a
dozen curved steel blades. It also had a brake on it for when the winds
got too high.

The blades were turned sideways (parallel to the tail) if they didn't
want it to pump any water---If you needed water you operated the lever
that placed the blades perpendicular to the rudder, tail,
whatever,-pointing into the wind, then you got some POWER..---OR--
did you have one of those weird looking things where the blades were
raked back severely at an angle about like the back 2/3 of a snowcone
cup? Jerry


Neither. The fan was 10-12 ft diameter, fixed so the wind would always
turn the fan. Since the blades were curved (cambered), the advancing
blade had less drag than the receding blade. I think it was a
Fairbanks-Morse product, but don't hold me to that, and it was built
about 1910.

A lot of windmills in our area (Northern Illinois) were of similar
design.

Sounds like a pelton wheel.
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q...on+w&aqi=g 10
  #9  
Old May 28th 09, 04:07 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Orval Fairbairn[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 530
Default Inspiration for Homebuilders

In article ,
Charlie wrote:

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Jerry Wass wrote:

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

This is a pointer to a home build 20 ft diam windmill on a 70 ft pole.
It features three 10 ft long laminated red cedar blades and nice
looking
generator, tower couplings and gin....


http://www.otherpower.com/20page1.html

Brian W

(Thanks to Larry for the pointer on rec.boats)
I hope that you have good lightning suppression!

Ha! I noticed the maker specified a blade angle of 3 degrees at the
tips, increasing to (approaching) 9 degrees at the roots.
It took me a little while to get my head round this. The maker mentioned
the blades are set flat (undersurface) forward into the wind, and I
think he mentioned a target rotation rate of 65 rpm.
I imagine he was thinking of an AoA of 15 degrees at the rated wind. The
tips do a revolution in pi x 20 ft = 63 ft per rev - so the rotation
rate at 65 rpm would give a tip speed of 65rpm X 63ft/rev X 60 min/hr /
5280 ft/mile or 47 mph.

I guess the pitch angle for zero AoA at the starting windspeed 16 mph
would be atan 16/47 = 19 degrees from the plane of revolution, so for 15
deg AoA the pitch angle might be 4 degrees from the plane of revolution
at the tips.
And he mentions 3 degrees. But getting up to speed with stalled blades
would be an issue...
What's your take, Orville?


Regards

Brian W
My first take is that you misspelled my name.

We had a big windmill on our farm when I was growing up. The plane of
rotation was parallel to the wind, rather than at a right angle. The fan
acted more as a wind turbine than a propeller. IIRC, the fan had about a
dozen curved steel blades. It also had a brake on it for when the winds
got too high.

The blades were turned sideways (parallel to the tail) if they didn't
want it to pump any water---If you needed water you operated the lever
that placed the blades perpendicular to the rudder, tail,
whatever,-pointing into the wind, then you got some POWER..---OR--
did you have one of those weird looking things where the blades were
raked back severely at an angle about like the back 2/3 of a snowcone
cup? Jerry


Neither. The fan was 10-12 ft diameter, fixed so the wind would always
turn the fan. Since the blades were curved (cambered), the advancing
blade had less drag than the receding blade. I think it was a
Fairbanks-Morse product, but don't hold me to that, and it was built
about 1910.

A lot of windmills in our area (Northern Illinois) were of similar
design.

Sounds like a pelton wheel.
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q...on+w&aqi=g 10


Nope -- it wasn't a Pelton Wheel!

As I posted earlier, I thought it was a Fairbanks-Morse model.

See the picture at: http://www.agwt.org/store/FairbanksWindmill.htm

The fan disc was parallel to the wind direction. This raises the
question: Could we dispense with the directional pivot and mount the fan
horizontal to the ground? It should be able to rotate with any direction
of wind.

Of course, good lightning protection is a MUST!

--
Remove _'s from email address to talk to me.
  #10  
Old May 28th 09, 05:54 AM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Dan[_12_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 451
Default Inspiration for Homebuilders

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Charlie wrote:

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Jerry Wass wrote:

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

Orval Fairbairn wrote:
In article ,
Brian Whatcott wrote:

This is a pointer to a home build 20 ft diam windmill on a 70 ft pole.
It features three 10 ft long laminated red cedar blades and nice
looking
generator, tower couplings and gin....


http://www.otherpower.com/20page1.html

Brian W

(Thanks to Larry for the pointer on rec.boats)
I hope that you have good lightning suppression!

Ha! I noticed the maker specified a blade angle of 3 degrees at the
tips, increasing to (approaching) 9 degrees at the roots.
It took me a little while to get my head round this. The maker mentioned
the blades are set flat (undersurface) forward into the wind, and I
think he mentioned a target rotation rate of 65 rpm.
I imagine he was thinking of an AoA of 15 degrees at the rated wind. The
tips do a revolution in pi x 20 ft = 63 ft per rev - so the rotation
rate at 65 rpm would give a tip speed of 65rpm X 63ft/rev X 60 min/hr /
5280 ft/mile or 47 mph.

I guess the pitch angle for zero AoA at the starting windspeed 16 mph
would be atan 16/47 = 19 degrees from the plane of revolution, so for 15
deg AoA the pitch angle might be 4 degrees from the plane of revolution
at the tips.
And he mentions 3 degrees. But getting up to speed with stalled blades
would be an issue...
What's your take, Orville?


Regards

Brian W
My first take is that you misspelled my name.

We had a big windmill on our farm when I was growing up. The plane of
rotation was parallel to the wind, rather than at a right angle. The fan
acted more as a wind turbine than a propeller. IIRC, the fan had about a
dozen curved steel blades. It also had a brake on it for when the winds
got too high.

The blades were turned sideways (parallel to the tail) if they didn't
want it to pump any water---If you needed water you operated the lever
that placed the blades perpendicular to the rudder, tail,
whatever,-pointing into the wind, then you got some POWER..---OR--
did you have one of those weird looking things where the blades were
raked back severely at an angle about like the back 2/3 of a snowcone
cup? Jerry
Neither. The fan was 10-12 ft diameter, fixed so the wind would always
turn the fan. Since the blades were curved (cambered), the advancing
blade had less drag than the receding blade. I think it was a
Fairbanks-Morse product, but don't hold me to that, and it was built
about 1910.

A lot of windmills in our area (Northern Illinois) were of similar
design.

Sounds like a pelton wheel.
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q...on+w&aqi=g 10


Nope -- it wasn't a Pelton Wheel!

As I posted earlier, I thought it was a Fairbanks-Morse model.

See the picture at: http://www.agwt.org/store/FairbanksWindmill.htm

The fan disc was parallel to the wind direction. This raises the
question: Could we dispense with the directional pivot and mount the fan
horizontal to the ground? It should be able to rotate with any direction
of wind.

Of course, good lightning protection is a MUST!


If memory serves the vane's angle could be manually changed as
needed for variations wind speed.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired
 




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