Cold Iron, on Dec 15 2008, 07:39 PM, said:
Cool post cf. i'll try to have a closer look at that report later. Now on to the technologies!
Firsty, I'd like to challenge your statement that "multiple propellors turning the same shaft produce more electrical energy than two side-by-side single propellor turbines, each turning a separate shaft". I looked around the website and couldn't find this anywhere. Per unit of materials you are going to get more output certainly, but even with a perfect design I can only see you approaching an equal amount of energy with the double as with two singles, but not more.
Also this development, while a genuine contender as a solution to the cost of materials problem, solves none of the other problems of wind power. Space is still a problem as I don't see these being able to produce a significant amount more watts per square meter of land (or sea). Total output is still a problem as even doubling or trippling the output will still not even come close to meeting the power needs of a country like Canada, which is huge and has a small population. Consider countries with a way higher power demand and way smaller land size.
And finally, noise. Noise is the reason you will not see urban adoption of wind technology. Even tiny ones are noisy and adding blades will just add to the noise. God forbid you be standing somewhere where the reverberation from the two blades were reaching you slightly out of phase with each other. Ever had your car window open just the wrong amount? You can literally mess with brain waves with sound, induce headaches, seisures or (on the plus side) trance-like states (no I have not seen examples of wind turbines causing trance-states, but i'm sure it could be done).
Ok on to the fat plane. Fat plane is fat. This seems to me to be a good way to transition away from fuel as a source of flight, like hybrid cars they are marrying an alternative technology with the existing status quo in order to mitigate some of the disadvantages. However, this is likely going to have the same problems with adoption as hybrids. It's dependent on the cost of the fuel. While fuel prices stay low, there's not enough motivation to pursue this stuff. And if cap and trade systems around the world are going to be as patheric as the one that was released by our gloriously green government yesterday for a 2010 roll out, this is not going to happen fast enough.
Get over your whining about your lost retirement funds people, you still have a house and a car, you are lucky. Don't be selfish, vote green

Thanks for the thoughtful response CI. Definitely have a gander at that pdf. It's a long dry read but I thought it was very interesting. Kind of shocked me as to the distribution and sources of carbon emissions. Anyways, your post above made me think more about the two technologies.
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The efficiency gain comes from the mechanics of the thing. Even if 2 props on one shaft is able to extract
equal amounts of energy from the air as 1 prop on each of 2 parallel shafts, you have less running gear in the single-shafted version. 2 or 3 less bearings to create friction and 1 less generator to turn.
THere are several other advantages as well.
-High speed, low-torque props mean you use a high-speed, low-torque generator in the turbine's nacelle. These are much cheaper to produce pound for pound than the high-torque low-speed generators used in larger wind turbine installations. Larger turbines also often have gearboxes to adjust the rotor speed to something more suitable for power generation. These are a large source of friction and energy loss.
-The shaft is designed to be flexible and it's able to limit its rotation in high winds because of this. On a normal turbine, there is a mechanism at the base of the blades that feathers the blades (turns them) to be less efficient in high winds, reducing the overall rotational speed of the turbine. Makes for more maintenance and more cost, plus there is a hefty response time between blade feathering and rotational speed change...which means there are times when generation capacity isn't at a peak. On selsam's rig, the whole shaft flexes in high winds so that the downwind props get shadowed in behind the upwind props. This causes a decrease in overall energy extraction efficiency, and slows rotation. No feathering mechanism makes the whole thing much cheaper, and you have a much lower response time between speed changes because the props are smaller and don't require as much force to accelerate up to speed.
-The key to Selsam's design is density, how much energy can be extracted from the wind in a given cross section. Remember that energy extraction potential is proportional to the
area of the blade cross section, not the length of the blades themselves. So, take a single prop turbine with 10 foot blades. It has an area of about 314 square feet for a total width of 20 feet. Next, take blades half the length. That gives us about 78 square feet of extraction area for a total width of 10 feet. Put 4 props like that on the same shaft and it equals 314 square feet at the same width. Now bring it to the reasonable limits of shaft and bearing design and you can get about 7 props like that on a shaft. Now you're up to 550 square feet of extraction area at exactly half the "footprint" of the larger turbine. That means more energy can be extracted on a smaller footprint than the larger turbine, using cheaper easier to maintain materials. Additionally, the lighter props mean you can operate in a lighter wind and therefore be closer to the ground. Lower tower means less materials and reduced installation costs.
All that said, they are noisy little fuckers. In fact they buzz like crazy and really wouldn't be suitable for widespread use in, say, a residential neighborhood. Where the multi turbine idea would shine is in rural areas (powering farms, unmanned research stations and whatnot) or someplace like a city where you have lots of high buildings. Noise from small turbines is miniscule compared to the overall noise at street level in a city so it would be viable from a human comfort point of view.
The idea of wind turbines on high city buildings has been an environmentalist's dream for years. However you can't build a big turbine on top of a building because the arerodynamic forces involved would rip a building to pieces. Take your standard 30-50 storey building in any large city. Chances are its structure was designed for supporting its weight, supporting the wind loading on its sides and some overdesign for seismic activity. Now put a 30 foot tower on the roof and a turbine with 20 foot blades. Unless specifically designed for it, there's no way the building could handle the weight of the turbine, let alone the forces required to hold it upright in a strong wind. Compare that to a multibladed turbine at a third the height and a fraction of the weight. Though the overall sideways force bearing on the turbine from the wind might be equal to the larger turbine, the lever arm that it's acting on is much smaller. Now you have something that is much more feasible for installation on pre-existing structures but maintains a useful generation capacity. It's something a large building operator might consider for some energy savings.
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I dont' know if you can compare fatplane to the hybrid model. Hybrids are a fundamentally flawed design because they don't actually provide fuel savings on the whole. When you consider the emissions from manufacturing the whole thing, including the battery, they aren't much better emmissions-wise than trucks. Plus many people that have them don't use them in an efficient manner. The hybrid is only useful when you're doing frequent acceleration and braking...ie driving around a city on
surface streets. All the people that own them and use them for commutes on freeways are wasting gas. If you're not stopping and starting your prius every few minutes (proven by research) you literally driving around a gas powered vehicle with about 500lbs extra weight tacked onto it. In fact, for highway driving, hybrids get worse gas mileage than some actually fuel efficient full size sedans (civic for example) entirely owing to the extra weight they carry. If you want to truly save gas, get a small fuel efficient gas fueled car. Hybrids are bullshit unless you're a cab driver. Small exception with the plugin hybrid, but they're still shitty.
[/rant on hybrids...goddamn I hate them]
Anyways, back to fatplane. Comparing it to a hybrid (ugh) isn't entirely accurate. Adoption of car hybrids is slow unless fuel prices are high because you need to pay a premium to own a hybrid (and its a significant premium). The whole idea behind fatplane is density...like selsam's wind turbine design. It uses so much less fuel and can transport so many passengers comfortably (compared to a jet) that right off the bat, passengers are charged significantly less for an equal distance traveled. Same goes for cargos. It doesn't matter what fuel prices are, it's going to be cheaper to fly fatplane than to fly on a jet no matter what. This massive economic saving will help with adoption regardless of fuel prices too since the thing can actually be made more cheaply than a jet plane. The fatplane just has a really good equation going for it.
More passengers per trip + novelty factor + green image - several $millions on purchase - several $millions on yearly fuel consumption = totally good idea.
EDIT: Low fuel prices are very temporary too and heavily related to the economic instability right now. Once shit levels out in another year or so, gas prices will go right back up again...mark my words. There's no way in the modern age that $40/barrel oil is going to stick around for long.
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This post has been edited by cerveza_fiesta: 16 December 2008 - 01:22 PM