
dohboi wrote:Thanks for the response, cog.
Did you notice, though, that wind does blow and sun does shine in and near France?
In fact there is a little thing called the Sahara just a few hundred miles away that has vast open spaces with lots and lots of sunshine.
But, I know it can be very difficult for some people to think about more than one thing at a time, and you seem to have hit on your one thing to think about, and you're stickin' to it.


dohboi wrote:How quickly things can change for the ideologically blinkered!




dohboi wrote:It just stuns me... really.


Cog wrote:Don't confuse Doh-boy with facts. He already said he has plugged up his ears and doesn't want to hear anymore about it.

This is nothing but mud slinging. Wind power has been evolving for hundreds of years. Modern wind turbines are far more advanced than the primitive wind power of medieval peasantry. You post belies the countless advances that have been made in wind power over the centuries, and are still continuing today. If you want to make a point about the economics of nuclear vs wind, you do not need to resort to such ignorant posts.GoIllini wrote:Nuclear is sustainable and a more land-efficient modern alternative to the wind power of medieval peasantry.
Wind Power's BeginningsThe history of wind power shows a general evolution from the use of simple, light devices driven by aerodynamic drag forces; to heavy, material-intensive drag devices; to the increased use of light, material-efficient aerodynamic lift devices in the modern era. The first windmills were developed to automate the tasks of grain-grinding and water-pumping and the earliest-known design is the vertical axis system developed in Persia about 500-900 A.D. While the belief that the windmill was invented in China more than 2000 years ago is widespread and may be accurate, the earliest actual documentation of a Chinese windmill was in 1219 A.D.
As early as 1390, the Dutch set out to refine the tower mill design. A primary improvement of the European mills was their designer's use of sails that generated aerodynamic lift (see Figure 4 at the left). This feature provided improved rotor efficiency compared with the Persian mills by allowing an increase in rotor speed, which also allowed for superior grinding and pumping action. The process of perfecting the windmill sail, making incremental improvements in efficiency, took 500 years. By the time the process was completed, windmill sails had all the major features recognized by modern designers as being crucial to the performance of modern wind turbine blades, including 1) camber along the leading edge, 2) placement of the blade spar at the quarter chord position (25% of the way back from the leading edge toward the trailing edge), 3) center of gravity at the same 1/4 chord position, and 4) nonlinear twist of the blade from root to tip. Some models also featured aerodynamic brakes, spoilers, and flaps.
By 1920, the two dominant rotor configurations (fan-type and sail) had both been tried and found to be inadequate for generating appreciable amounts of electricity. The further development of wind generator electrical systems in the United States was inspired by the design of airplane propellers and (later) monoplane wings. The development of bulk-power, utility-scale wind energy conversion systems was first undertaken in Russia in 1931 with the 100kW Balaclava wind generator. This machine operated for about two years on the shore of the Caspian Sea, generating 200,000 kWh of electricity. Subsequent experimental wind plants in the United States, Denmark, France, Germany, and Great Britain during the period 1935-1970 showed that large-scale wind turbines would work, but failed to result in a practical large electrical wind turbine.
European developments continued after World War II, when temporary shortages of fossil fuels led to higher energy costs. In Germany, Professor Ulrich Hutter developed a series of advanced, horizontal-axis designs of intermediate size that utilized modern, airfoil-type fiberglass and plastic blades with variable pitch to provide light weight and high efficiencies. This design approach sought to reduce bearing and structural failures by "shedding" aerodynamic loads, rather than "withstanding" them as did the Danish approach. One of the most innovative load-shedding design features was the use of a bearing at the rotor hub that allowed the rotor to "teeter" in response to wind gusts and vertical wind shear. Hutter's advanced designs achieved over 4000 hours of operation before the experiments were ended in 1968.
Post war activity in Denmark and Germany largely dictated the two major horizontal-axis design approaches that would emerge when attention returned to wind turbine development in the early 1970s. The Danes refined the simple, fixed pitch, Gedser Mill design, utilizing advanced materials, improved aerodynamic design, and aerodynamic controls to reduce some of its shortcomings. The engineering innovations of the light-weight, higher efficiency German machines, such as a teeter hinge at the rotor hub, were used later by U.S. designers.
The development of modern vertical-axis rotors was begun in France by G.J.M. Darrieus in the 1920s. Of the several rotors Darrieus designed, the most important one is a rotor comprising slender, curved, airfoil-section blades attached at the top and bottom of a rotating vertical tube. Major development work on this concept did not begin until the concept was reinvented in the late 1960s by two Canadian researchers. U.S. efforts with the Darrieus concept at Sandia National Laboratories began after the 1973 oil embargo, with the entry of the U.S. Federal Wind Energy Program into the cycle of wind energy development.

Wind Power's Beginnings[/quote]The history of wind power shows a general evolution from the use of simple, light devices driven by aerodynamic drag forces; to heavy, material-intensive drag devices; to the increased use of light, material-efficient aerodynamic lift devices in the modern era. The first windmills were developed to automate the tasks of grain-grinding and water-pumping and the earliest-known design is the vertical axis system developed in Persia about 500-900 A.D. While the belief that the windmill was invented in China more than 2000 years ago is widespread and may be accurate, the earliest actual documentation of a Chinese windmill was in 1219 A.D.
As early as 1390, the Dutch set out to refine the tower mill design. A primary improvement of the European mills was their designer's use of sails that generated aerodynamic lift (see Figure 4 at the left). This feature provided improved rotor efficiency compared with the Persian mills by allowing an increase in rotor speed, which also allowed for superior grinding and pumping action. The process of perfecting the windmill sail, making incremental improvements in efficiency, took 500 years. By the time the process was completed, windmill sails had all the major features recognized by modern designers as being crucial to the performance of modern wind turbine blades, including 1) camber along the leading edge, 2) placement of the blade spar at the quarter chord position (25% of the way back from the leading edge toward the trailing edge), 3) center of gravity at the same 1/4 chord position, and 4) nonlinear twist of the blade from root to tip. Some models also featured aerodynamic brakes, spoilers, and flaps.
By 1920, the two dominant rotor configurations (fan-type and sail) had both been tried and found to be inadequate for generating appreciable amounts of electricity. The further development of wind generator electrical systems in the United States was inspired by the design of airplane propellers and (later) monoplane wings. The development of bulk-power, utility-scale wind energy conversion systems was first undertaken in Russia in 1931 with the 100kW Balaclava wind generator. This machine operated for about two years on the shore of the Caspian Sea, generating 200,000 kWh of electricity. Subsequent experimental wind plants in the United States, Denmark, France, Germany, and Great Britain during the period 1935-1970 showed that large-scale wind turbines would work, but failed to result in a practical large electrical wind turbine.
European developments continued after World War II, when temporary shortages of fossil fuels led to higher energy costs. In Germany, Professor Ulrich Hutter developed a series of advanced, horizontal-axis designs of intermediate size that utilized modern, airfoil-type fiberglass and plastic blades with variable pitch to provide light weight and high efficiencies. This design approach sought to reduce bearing and structural failures by "shedding" aerodynamic loads, rather than "withstanding" them as did the Danish approach. One of the most innovative load-shedding design features was the use of a bearing at the rotor hub that allowed the rotor to "teeter" in response to wind gusts and vertical wind shear. Hutter's advanced designs achieved over 4000 hours of operation before the experiments were ended in 1968.
Post war activity in Denmark and Germany largely dictated the two major horizontal-axis design approaches that would emerge when attention returned to wind turbine development in the early 1970s. The Danes refined the simple, fixed pitch, Gedser Mill design, utilizing advanced materials, improved aerodynamic design, and aerodynamic controls to reduce some of its shortcomings. The engineering innovations of the light-weight, higher efficiency German machines, such as a teeter hinge at the rotor hub, were used later by U.S. designers.
The development of modern vertical-axis rotors was begun in France by G.J.M. Darrieus in the 1920s. Of the several rotors Darrieus designed, the most important one is a rotor comprising slender, curved, airfoil-section blades attached at the top and bottom of a rotating vertical tube. Major development work on this concept did not begin until the concept was reinvented in the late 1960s by two Canadian researchers. U.S. efforts with the Darrieus concept at Sandia National Laboratories began after the 1973 oil embargo, with the entry of the U.S. Federal Wind Energy Program into the cycle of wind energy development.

peeker01 wrote:k - take a look at germany's proposed energy budget for the replacement of nukes. wind isn't
even mentioned as a power source......why, you ask.......because if you have calm
days, real powerplants have to be available to pick up the slack.

Cog wrote:peeker01 wrote:k - take a look at germany's proposed energy budget for the replacement of nukes. wind isn't
even mentioned as a power source......why, you ask.......because if you have calm
days, real powerplants have to be available to pick up the slack.
There you go bringing up unpleasant realities again. Don't you know that green energy doesn't require a working model just a belief model?


Source? I heard otherwise:peeker01 wrote:k - take a look at germany's proposed energy budget for the replacement of nukes. wind isn't even mentioned as a power source......why, you ask.......because if you have calm days, real powerplants have to be available to pick up the slack.
No nukes, No problem. Germany is proving a rapid transition to renewable energy is possibleWhile hydro power, geothermal, and biogas play an important role in the renewable mix, wind and solar power will expand the most rapidly under the German renewable energy strategy. It is projected that wind and solar will supply 18% and 7% of national electricity by the end of this decade, respectively.
The "unpleasant reality" is that the Germany plans a rapid expansion of it's renewable energy options. But don't let facts get in your way.Cog wrote:There you go bringing up unpleasant realities again. Don't you know that green energy doesn't require a working model just a belief model?
I am all for continued fusion research. But It is not ready to meet our energy needs for the next few decades. Thus we must look at alternatives.GoIllini wrote:That's where we either need fission or- ideally- fusion to step in. The wonderful thing about fusion is that the waste is as harmless as a balloon at a birthday party and the input can be found in seawater. For the Malthusians in the audience, don't worry, we will run out of Deuterium long before we run out of seawater.
The economic realities of nuclear energy have changed post Fukushima. Increased costs of safety systems, not to mention nuclear disaster cleanup costs, have made nuclear prohibitively expensive.GoIllini wrote:I don't want to downplay wind- it's great if we can do it for 10 cents/kwh, but it is not really an effective technology for producing large amounts of sustainable energy.
Fukushima Disaster Will Drive Up Future Nuclear Power CostsIn the aftermath of the Japan earthquake and tsunami, nuclear reactors worldwide have been turned off and construction of nuclear plants has been put on hold. Costly new safety measures that might be required because of the Fukushima disaster could make the expense of nuclear power prohibitive to investors as a primary source of energy in the future. Going forward from Fukushima, investors will view clean energy alternatives for instance natural gas, wind and solar as more attractive than nuclear plants. It also might impact utilities. The businesses do not want the nuclear plant risk. Financially, nuclear energy is no longer a cheap option to other sources of energy. Onshore wind farms are 35 percent cheaper than the typical nuclear plant without considering nuclear accident cleanup costs. In the future, choice sources will become increasingly capable of helping meet the world’s energy needs without the financial and ecological costs of nuclear power. For savvy investors, clean energy alternatives promise more profitable opportunities.

doiboi wrote:but now that, in the face of overwhelming direct evidence that <nuclear> is fatally toxic industry

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