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Default Third World Wind Power

Shawn Frayne is a 28-year-old inventor based in Mountain View,
California, winner of the Popular Mechanics 2007 Breakthrough Award,
who has devised a way to harness the potential of wind without the
need for conventional wind turbines.
http://www.popularmechanics.com/tech...html?series=37

As Frayne explains, conventional wind turbines don't scale down well
because there's too much friction in the gearbox and other components:
"With rotary power, there's nothing out there that generates under 50
watts".

The Windbelt gets around these problems by putting aside rotation
entirely. Instead, a method has been developed by which a taut,
vibrating membrane, coupled with a no-contact, direct-drive electrical
generator, can tap the energy of flowing air.

By studying the way vibrations caused by the wind (aeroelastic
flutter) led to the collapse in 1940 of Washington's Tacoma Bridge,
Frayne came up with the idea for the Windbelt, which is basically a
taut membrane fitted with a pair of magnets that oscillate between
metal coils.

http://www.humdingerwind.com/windbelt.html


The Windbelt is the world's first turbine-less wind generator -- a
completely new way to look at wind power which is changing the
landscape of the field.
Prototypes have been capable of generating 40 milliwatts in 10-mph
slivers of wind, making his device 10 to 30 times as efficient as the
best microturbines and enough to power LED lamps and radios.

The Windbelt technology was originally conceived in 2004, during a
trip to Petite Anse, Haiti. This fishing village near the coast was
not connected to an electrical grid, and the only lighting available
was diesel-powered or kerosene-based.

The Windbelt fulfilled its original design criteria while
demonstrating 10x the efficiency of the state-of-the-art in micro-
turbine technology on these scales.
Now, Humdinger is poised to take this technology and apply it to a
wide array of fields, from rural lighting to energy harvesting for
wireless sensors in 'smart buildings'.

Peter Haas, founder of the Appropriate Infrastructure Development
Group, which helps people in developing countries to get
environmentally sound access to clean water, sanitation and energy,
and has a whole section of their website dedicated to WindMills, sees
many advantages in Frayne's invention: "If Shawn's innovation breaks,
locals can fix it. If a solar panel breaks, the family is out a
panel."
"There's not a huge amount of innovation being done for people making
$2 to $4 per day," Haas added. "Shawn's work is definitely needed."

http://gadgetgreeninspector.blogspot...ind-power.html

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Default Third World Wind Power

On Oct 22, 8:27 pm, Gadget Inspector
wrote:
Shawn Frayne is a 28-year-old inventor based in Mountain View,
California, winner of the Popular Mechanics 2007 Breakthrough Award,
who has devised a way to harness the potential of wind without the
need for conventional wind turbines.http://www.popularmechanics.com/tech...4763.html?seri...

As Frayne explains, conventional wind turbines don't scale down well
because there's too much friction in the gearbox and other components:
"With rotary power, there's nothing out there that generates under 50
watts".

The Windbelt gets around these problems by putting aside rotation
entirely. Instead, a method has been developed by which a taut,
vibrating membrane, coupled with a no-contact, direct-drive electrical
generator, can tap the energy of flowing air.

By studying the way vibrations caused by the wind (aeroelastic
flutter) led to the collapse in 1940 of Washington's Tacoma Bridge,
Frayne came up with the idea for the Windbelt, which is basically a
taut membrane fitted with a pair of magnets that oscillate between
metal coils.

http://www.humdingerwind.com/windbelt.html

The Windbelt is the world's first turbine-less wind generator -- a
completely new way to look at wind power which is changing the
landscape of the field.
Prototypes have been capable of generating 40 milliwatts in 10-mph
slivers of wind, making his device 10 to 30 times as efficient as the
best microturbines and enough to power LED lamps and radios.

The Windbelt technology was originally conceived in 2004, during a
trip to Petite Anse, Haiti. This fishing village near the coast was
not connected to an electrical grid, and the only lighting available
was diesel-powered or kerosene-based.

The Windbelt fulfilled its original design criteria while
demonstrating 10x the efficiency of the state-of-the-art in micro-
turbine technology on these scales.
Now, Humdinger is poised to take this technology and apply it to a
wide array of fields, from rural lighting to energy harvesting for
wireless sensors in 'smart buildings'.

Peter Haas, founder of the Appropriate Infrastructure Development
Group, which helps people in developing countries to get
environmentally sound access to clean water, sanitation and energy,
and has a whole section of their website dedicated to WindMills, sees
many advantages in Frayne's invention: "If Shawn's innovation breaks,
locals can fix it. If a solar panel breaks, the family is out a
panel."
"There's not a huge amount of innovation being done for people making
$2 to $4 per day," Haas added. "Shawn's work is definitely needed."

http://gadgetgreeninspector.blogspot...world-wind-pow...


If you have ever spent the night anywhere near a marina you will have
noticed the power available in the rigging just having mast stays.
They are unbelievably noisy and clang all night in the least wind
imaginable.

Funny thing -they are virtually silent all the hours of daylight.

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Default Third World Wind Power


"Gadget Inspector" wrote in message
oups.com...
Shawn Frayne is a 28-year-old inventor based in Mountain View,
California, winner of the Popular Mechanics 2007 Breakthrough Award,
who has devised a way to harness the potential of wind without the
need for conventional wind turbines.
http://www.popularmechanics.com/tech...html?series=37

As Frayne explains, conventional wind turbines don't scale down well
because there's too much friction in the gearbox and other components:
"With rotary power, there's nothing out there that generates under 50
watts".

The Windbelt gets around these problems by putting aside rotation
entirely. Instead, a method has been developed by which a taut,
vibrating membrane, coupled with a no-contact, direct-drive electrical
generator, can tap the energy of flowing air.

By studying the way vibrations caused by the wind (aeroelastic
flutter) led to the collapse in 1940 of Washington's Tacoma Bridge,
Frayne came up with the idea for the Windbelt, which is basically a
taut membrane fitted with a pair of magnets that oscillate between
metal coils.

http://www.humdingerwind.com/windbelt.html


The Windbelt is the world's first turbine-less wind generator -- a
completely new way to look at wind power which is changing the
landscape of the field.
Prototypes have been capable of generating 40 milliwatts in 10-mph
slivers of wind, making his device 10 to 30 times as efficient as the
best microturbines and enough to power LED lamps and radios.

The Windbelt technology was originally conceived in 2004, during a
trip to Petite Anse, Haiti. This fishing village near the coast was
not connected to an electrical grid, and the only lighting available
was diesel-powered or kerosene-based.

The Windbelt fulfilled its original design criteria while
demonstrating 10x the efficiency of the state-of-the-art in micro-
turbine technology on these scales.
Now, Humdinger is poised to take this technology and apply it to a
wide array of fields, from rural lighting to energy harvesting for
wireless sensors in 'smart buildings'.

Peter Haas, founder of the Appropriate Infrastructure Development
Group, which helps people in developing countries to get
environmentally sound access to clean water, sanitation and energy,
and has a whole section of their website dedicated to WindMills, sees
many advantages in Frayne's invention: "If Shawn's innovation breaks,
locals can fix it. If a solar panel breaks, the family is out a
panel."
"There's not a huge amount of innovation being done for people making
$2 to $4 per day," Haas added. "Shawn's work is definitely needed."

http://gadgetgreeninspector.blogspot...ind-power.html


So what *IS* your point?




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Default Third World Wind Power

Gadget Inspector wrote:

Shawn Frayne is a 28-year-old inventor based in Mountain View,
California, winner of the Popular Mechanics 2007 Breakthrough Award,
who has devised a way to harness the potential of wind without the
need for conventional wind turbines.
http://www.popularmechanics.com/tech...html?series=37

As Frayne explains, conventional wind turbines don't scale down well
because there's too much friction in the gearbox and other components:
"With rotary power, there's nothing out there that generates under 50
watts".

The Windbelt gets around these problems by putting aside rotation
entirely. Instead, a method has been developed by which a taut,
vibrating membrane, coupled with a no-contact, direct-drive electrical
generator, can tap the energy of flowing air.

By studying the way vibrations caused by the wind (aeroelastic
flutter) led to the collapse in 1940 of Washington's Tacoma Bridge,
Frayne came up with the idea for the Windbelt, which is basically a
taut membrane fitted with a pair of magnets that oscillate between
metal coils.

http://www.humdingerwind.com/windbelt.html


The Windbelt is the world's first turbine-less wind generator -- a
completely new way to look at wind power which is changing the
landscape of the field.
Prototypes have been capable of generating 40 milliwatts in 10-mph
slivers of wind, making his device 10 to 30 times as efficient as the
best microturbines and enough to power LED lamps and radios.

The Windbelt technology was originally conceived in 2004, during a
trip to Petite Anse, Haiti. This fishing village near the coast was
not connected to an electrical grid, and the only lighting available
was diesel-powered or kerosene-based.

The Windbelt fulfilled its original design criteria while
demonstrating 10x the efficiency of the state-of-the-art in micro-
turbine technology on these scales.
Now, Humdinger is poised to take this technology and apply it to a
wide array of fields, from rural lighting to energy harvesting for
wireless sensors in 'smart buildings'.

Peter Haas, founder of the Appropriate Infrastructure Development
Group, which helps people in developing countries to get
environmentally sound access to clean water, sanitation and energy,
and has a whole section of their website dedicated to WindMills, sees
many advantages in Frayne's invention: "If Shawn's innovation breaks,
locals can fix it. If a solar panel breaks, the family is out a
panel."
"There's not a huge amount of innovation being done for people making
$2 to $4 per day," Haas added. "Shawn's work is definitely needed."

http://gadgetgreeninspector.blogspot...ind-power.html



What on earth can one do with 40mW? Light a single LED die
when the wind blows at the right speed occasionally. Its hard to
think of any real world use for it.

The cost per watt is also excessive: lets say it took an hour of
labour to make one from scrap bits, thats at least £5 per 40mW =
£100/watt.

If this is the best the socalled inventor came up with, he's a slice
short of a loaf.


NT

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Default Third World Wind Power

On Mon, 22 Oct 2007 19:27:49 +0000, Gadget Inspector wrote:

---8---

Yawn!

http://groups.google.co.uk/group/uk....e6d17b4c78e0b8

--
John Stumbles

What do you mean, talking about it isn't oral sex?
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