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Forum Index : Electronics : Slip Rings?

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drewgarth

Newbie

Joined: 30/07/2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 8
Posted: 04:49am 30 Jul 2006
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Hi Folks,
Im just getting into the idea of making my own wind turbine.

I notice on the F&P windmill description, the wires get run down the centre of the pole tower. Are there slip rings in the system somewhere? Otherwise arent the wires from the Gen going to get twisted once they are attached to something at the bottom?

cheers
Andrew
 
RossW
Guru

Joined: 25/02/2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 495
Posted: 10:27am 30 Jul 2006
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  drewgarth said   Hi Folks,
Im just getting into the idea of making my own wind turbine.

I notice on the F&P windmill description, the wires get run down the centre of the pole tower. Are there slip rings in the system somewhere? Otherwise arent the wires from the Gen going to get twisted once they are attached to something at the bottom?

cheers
Andrew


Quick analysis of the wind direction every 10 seconds for the last errr... nearly 5 months...

Starting from 08-Mar 16:42
Ending 30-Jul 20:19 dir=351 tot=-632 (-5842/324) run=8437.627500 avg=5.643730
Worst: -16 anticlockwise   0 clockwise   -1 now
Useful run=5017.808611 avg=13.799299 hours=363

So, over that 5 months, the maximum "windup" of the mill would have been 16 turns anticlockwise. As at now, it would be 1 turn anticlockwise (ie, it's nearly wound itself back straight!)

(I have sliprings, but over a 9 metre tower, I think the cable would handle 16 turns without any great problem)

Wind Velocity histogram:
05-10kmh 445.4 hrs <-- damnit not really useful
10-15kmh 262.7 hrs
15-20kmh 73.8 hrs
20-25kmh 21.8 hrs
25-30kmh 4.3 hrs
30-35kmh 0.9 hrs
35-40kmh 0.2 hrs

As you can see, it's spent a lot of time sitting doing nothing over the last few months :(

Still, 363 hrs @ 13.8KMH should have turned in at least 90 kilowatt hours of "free" energy so far (probably much more since power returned at higher wind speeds is much better than averaging would suggest)
 
brucedownunder2
Guru

Joined: 14/09/2005
Location: Australia
Posts: 1548
Posted: 10:41pm 30 Jul 2006
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Andrew, Slip rings are fine if you want to build them ,I'd make them out of 10mm wedding rings of 75mm copper water pipe epoxy set on the rotating hub with copper/carbon brushes(starter motor type)
Just drill the pop rivets out of the brush holders and re mount them somehow.
Mine works well,but ,I ,ve used ordinary brushes and they offer too much resistance..

Ross, just love that gismo thing you monitor the conditions with --can I get a pcb for building one ,or ,better still, can I buy one in kit form?
Do u have to have your computer one 24/7 for that info to be collected or does the little "onboard" chip store it for some time ?

Is this the new fangled thingybob that Gismo has developed?
Bruce
Bushboy
 
RossW
Guru

Joined: 25/02/2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 495
Posted: 03:25am 31 Jul 2006
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  brucedownunder2 said  
Ross, just love that gismo thing you monitor the conditions with --can I get a pcb for building one ,or ,better still, can I buy one in kit form?
Do u have to have your computer one 24/7 for that info to be collected or does the little "onboard" chip store it for some time ?

Is this the new fangled thingybob that Gismo has developed?Bruce


Bruce, sadly its not something I can practically just give you a kit for. Well, I suppose I could actually... it'd need some tweeking though.

In short, this particular one is a WX-200 weatherstation, but because I live in an off-grid house, power is an issue. I don't have enough spare watt-hours to run big computers here - we have 5 laptops that run 24/7, but all the "real" computing is done down the bottom of the hill over a microwave radio link.

Up here though, "on the hill", all my RS232 stuff plugs into an 8-port Lantronix "terminal server". This basically converts each RS232 device so it "looks" like a TCP/IP port.

I've written software that runs on a couple of my unix boxes "down the hill" that connects to various things up here (security system, weather, C-bus, inverter, genset, touchscreen etc etc) and watches/controls/logs stuff.

The weather data is logged every minute, but wind data (speed and direction) every 10 seconds.

The "analysis" script you saw before simply parses each 10 second sample and keeps track of which way the mill would be pointing and how far that is in total rotation from some arbitary starting point. Where there has been a period without wind and it starts back up again from a different direction, the code works out which way it would probably have moved (eg, if it was an easterly wind that stopped and started an hour later from south, it would figure the mill only had to turn 90 degrees clockwise and would not have turned the 270 degrees anticlockwise.
The histogram is purely totaling 10-second intervals based on the speed, and displaying the cumulative seconds (converted to hours) in each speed bracket, and the amount of "useful" wind is based on my observations of wind speed Vs "useful" output.
Data is stored to hard disk, so I can easily go back and extract wind from any particular year/month/day/hour/minute and process it for whatever I'm interested in at the time.
I have a much better weatherstation, but it's not available to the public, and it's 3Km away so I don't use it for this analysis.
(If you're interested, http://weather.albury.net.au/ is some of the weather data, and http://skycam.albury.net.au/ is the view from here looking south. My office is just below and just left of centre, about 3.5Km away)
 
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