Scott wrote:
I visited the UK's largest on-shore wind farm this afternoon. Some of
the turbines were running and others were not. I assume this was
simply a factor of demand.
There was one turbine we watched (turbine 40). It was running as we
arrived, then it stopped, then it restarted (all as others in the same
section continued to run). Why would they stop and start one turbine?
Do they need to be rested or tested or rebooted periodically?
How do they maintain the frequency if the rotation speed can vary with
the wind? I know they can adjust the angle of the blades but it was
clear the turbines were not all running at the same speed.
https://www.lagerweywind.nl/wp-conte...LW_L147_en.pdf
GENERAL
Nominal power 4.3 MW
Rotor diameter 147 m
IEC class IIA
Turbine concept Direct drive, variable speed,
variable pitch, full power
Power control Electric pitch control
GENERATOR Lagerwey multi-pole
synchronous generator
Field generation Permanent magnet
Cooling Based on air flow around
the outside of generator
(cooling fins)
CONVERTER
Type Full power AC-DC-AC
Control system IGBT-Control
Cooling Water-cooled
OPERATIONAL DATA
Cut in wind speed 2.5 m/s
Cut out wind speed 25.0 m/s
Power factor Regulated
SAFETY SYSTEM 3 independent pitch control
systems with emergency
power provision
OTHER
Service brake system Standard
Lubrication system Automatically controlled
bearing and gear lubrication
The AC-DC-AC part, the output AC side matches the grid frequency.
The output side could be single-phase or three-phase, whatever
the customer wants.
Paul