Product Details
Wind Power for Home & Business: Renewable Energy for the 1990s and Beyond (Real Goods Independent Living Book)

Wind Power for Home & Business: Renewable Energy for the 1990s and Beyond (Real Goods Independent Living Book)
By Paul Gipe

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #169184 in Books
  • Published on: 1993-05
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 413 pages

Editorial Reviews

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Wind works. It's reliable. It's economical. It makes environmental sense. And it's here now. Wind machines are not tomorrow's technology. Whether it's on a giant wind farm in California, in a small village in Morocco, or in the backyard of a Kansas wheat farmer, wind energy works today in a variety of applications around the world. You too can put this renewable resource to work. The following chapters explain how to go about doing just that: how to select and install the small wind power systems on the market today.

Wind technology has come a long way since the mid-1970s when the only wind turbines available were 1930s-era machines salvaged from ranchers on the Great Plains. During the past decade wind technology has come of age with the development of advanced small wind turbines. These rugged yet extremely simple designs have greatly improved the reliability and performance of small wind machines. But as you'll see in the chapters ahead, wind machines are not for everyone.

To use the wind successfully you must have a good site, have enough wind, and select the right machine. You also need something else. Using wind energy takes courage. Wind machines are not cheap, and whether you install it yourself or contract a dealer to do it, the installation of a wind machine is an undertaking fraught with risk and uncertainty. At some point, after considering all the pros and cons, a decision must be made that only you can make. You must weigh the options, then act. The people who use wind energy are prudent, but they're doers.

People use wind machines for many reasons: economic, environmental, and philosophical. The knowledge that you're saving money--in some cases earning it--is often sufficient reward for plunging into wind energy. Yet for many there's more to it than that. Windmills have fascinated us for centuries and will continue to do so. Like campfires or falling water, they're mesmerizing, indeed, entrancing. People respond almost instinctively. Few escape the excitement created by a sleek turbine whirring in the wind.

Working with the wind is more than just a means to cheap electricity. It becomes a way of life, a way of living in closer harmony with the world around us. Harnessing the wind for energy enables us to regain some sense of responsibility for meeting our own needs, and for reducing our impact on the environment. By generating our own electricity cleanly and with a renewable resource we can reduce the need for distant power plants and their attendant ills.


Customer Reviews

Wind Power ... Gipe has presented a well organized picture5
I have recently become interested in Wind Energy and the possibilities it presents for NY. With a finite supply coal/oil/ and other fossil fuels it is a matter of time before alternative forms of energy become cost effective.

Gipe was able to present an overview of Wind Energy. He offers mathematical equations for the energy produced, The difference between Energy and Power, and practical presentation of how, what, and why Wind is a viable source.

Chapters include: Measuring Wind, Estimating output, Economics of the system, Towers, Interconnections with a Utility, Stand Alone, Water pumping, Installation, and Safety.

I would have liked to see more detail on placement added into the chapters but Gipe does give you other sources to look into.

Overall Gipe does an excellent job of presenting Wind energy in an understandable fashion. I would recommend any interested in venturing into wind energy would start with reading this book. I am reading it for a second time.

Experience behind the theory4
Gives a great overview of the history of wind power, and a practical guide, backed up with decades of experience that any novice can understand. Great book for anyone who is new to small wind that wants to get involved or install their own system.

A Good Intro to a Much-Hyped Technology4
Many would like to take advantage of the wind, a so-called 'free' energy resource to do things ranging from pumping water for irrigation to supplying their home or business energy needs. Over the course of the book, via extended examples of practical, functioning and active wind power systems, Paul Gipe makes clear just how 'free' this free energy source actually is.

While Mr. Gipe concedes readily that the wind can be harnessed to provide energy, he also patiently explains the limitations in doing so. Mr. Gipe is probably the technology's most level-headed advocate, and he makes clear what these systems can and can not do.

Although wind energy systems have lots of potential, they often fall short for several practical reasons. As Mr. Gipe quickly points out, not all sites are suitable for harnessing the wind, and the most important criterion for wind energy development is the stability of the wind resource, and not necessarily its maximum speed (as it turns out, practically all commercially available systems will not produce any energy above a certain speed, for aerodynamic reasons). This is the first and most common misconception that Mr. Gipe dispels, and throughout the book he provides a lot of clarification on many other wind energy myths and misconceptions. A second very common misconception among the public, who have been sold these energy systems based on their clean image (zero greenhouse gas emissions), is the ongoing confusion between power and energy, which many consider to be equal. Gipe takes us slowly through the mathematics, and shows us the important difference between power and energy.

Many unscrupulous advocates of so-called 'free' energy- solar and/or wind power have fooled more than a few technological neophytes by citing the high efficiency of such systems at converting the wind to power, er, ah, I mean energy. However, this is misleading for two reasons. First, power is not what we at home pay for; we pay for energy. Second, and most important, these knaves often cite efficiency at hub height, and not in terms of final output (which is what you really are paying for), when they 'sell' (more like hype) wind power. Granted there is lots of energy in the wind, but that is energy of motion, and that has to be ultimately converted into electrical energy to brew your coffee or run your toaster, and alas, the efficiency of such conversions is rather low, right around that for coal or petroleum fired electric power plants (and a bit below that of natural gas fired plants).

The book covers all the wind power basics, from estimating your wind resource (distribution of wind speeds for your particular site), to estimating your annual energy output with a given system, to costing the system and issues related to siting and installation. All in all, it is a very comprehensive book, complete with chapters devoted to each aspect of an individual wind energy system- rotor, transmission, tower, as well as issues dealing with interconnection to the utility and proper transformation of voltage for home use.

For me, the most important admission made in the book is the fact that no one can say exactly how much power (uh, energy!) the system will deliver. Because the wind is an intermittent resource, the amount of useful energy output depends to a great extent on the type of wind resource one has, namely the distribution of wind speeds throughout the year, and less on such things as the size of the rotor, the height of the tower and the efficiency of the entire system. In fact, because each system is unique in that it has a different rotor diameter, hub height and total system efficiency, one must estimate for each and every system under consideration the annual energy output. Failure to do so will mean overestimating the capability of your site and your wind energy system, and in turn, not getting all the energy you may require. As a result, knowing your site and its wind speed distribution (generally five years of data) is more important than the type of system you choose.

As a result, I have come to see wind energy systems for the home not as an enabling technology but as a limiting technology. This is the primary reason why investor owned and municipal utilities tend to use these systems as peak energy off-sets, and not as dedicated systems to meet fixed energy demands. Though Gipe does not say this in so many words, he does admit that the technology, while having many possible applications and lots of potential, also has a lot of fundamental limitations.

Mr. Gipe has written a few other books on the subject, some of them a bit more recent than this one. Still, this book makes for a good, clear and level-headed introduction to a much hyped technology.