Sally wrote:I checked. The wind turbine is 1700 Watts. Says it produces up to 1300 kw per month and the blades are 6 feet. Says also I need to buy a battery and mounting pole. I have 2 windy acres and understand that I won't always have full power but would like as much as I can get to support the load you described. We have a large family, using MANY appliances, the furnace, well pump and other items at great expense. (electric bill runs avg. $250 per month in addition to fuel oil for the furnace at $5675 per year) That is $8675 per year. I want to get rid of the oil furnace and use all electric. We need to curb costs to get these kids through college.I don't see us using less of these items and I have enough room and cause to warrant buying more than one turbine if needed. Without a wind measure and just an educated guess, how many turbines do you think I should consider for the load you described? Thanks for your response. Sally
You may wish to look for a larger unit rather than multiple units in that size. Do you know what what wind is required for that unit to reach rated power?
My very rough guess is that you need 25 kW installed capacity. 25 kW/1.7 kW = 15 of those turbines.
Large commercial turbines, like the GE, generally require 14 m/s wind for full power. That is 30 miles per hour, what the National Weather Service calls gale force winds. MOST of the time, they are producing much less than rated power. The words "up to" are classic specsmanship. They are guarenteeing you won't get more, and the fact is, you won't get nearly that.
You need enough capacity that I wouldn't recommend proceeding based on salesman's promises. You need a wind survey and some reasonable guarentees about the number of kilowatt hours per year you can expect in the measured wind conditions. There are plenty of snake-oil salesmen who are glad to take advantage of people trying to be green.
(I don't do wind surveys, nor is wind energy my field of engineering, so I have nothing to sell you. I do have a general interest in alternative energy.)
Oops. Is the figure you gave before your present electric use, with oil heat? My estimate of 25 kW capacity is based only on the electric bill you mentioned earlier. If you wish to replace the furnace, you need a lot more. Do you have an idea how many gallons of fuel oil you use either per day or per month during the peak of winter (probably January).
As a rough guess, if you burn a gallon per hour on the coldest days of the year, you need about 37.5 kW of reliable electric heating. To generate that form intermittant wind, you may need another 150 kW or more of installed turbine-generator capacity.
But please understand, these are SWAGS, and your cost is going to be way too high to proceed on the basis of these estimates. You need a qualified engineer to review on site, and do a wind survey. His cost will be tiny compared to the total.