JT wrote:
My favourite little "factoid" is that each one contains a clutch mechanism with no other purpose than to disconnect the rotor from the generator so that in light winds it can continue to rotate, giving the false appearance to the casual observer that it is generating when in fact all it's doing is wearing the bearings out for no gain whatsoever.
Fat lot of good that would do on an offshore battery – you can hardly see
them from the shore! So perhaps it’s an optimisation that has been
misunderstood. There is a discussion on wiki about why faster moving
blades have lower losses. By free-wheeling, they could continue to turn
and pick up momentum even in fairly calm conditions. That momentum
can be later accessed and converted once the loss-threshold is reached.
This would still allow an out-of-phase battery of turbines to continue
producing constantly even when there is little wind. The right place for
them is the fens. It’s flat and always blowing out there. They can fit as
many as they like – it would break up the boredom (slightly). They
shouldn’t fit them in nice places like Wales or Cumberland, though.
JT wrote:
Perhaps the thinking is that if we have to endure enough of the damned things we'll all come round to thinking that Nuclear Power stations aren't so bad after all...?
Yes, Nuclear Power stations are the right thing, but we should consider
putting them near major centres of population like Birmingham and
Middlesbrough - it sounds odd, but think about it - those places have
already gone to pot, and they need the jobs. Also, there would be a
strong imperative not to scrimp on safety engineering – it would show
confidence in the systems. Last, it would allow the cooling by-product to
be reused in shared heating projects for the masses – useful when the
gas is all gone!