Doubt about windmill cleaning with helicopter
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Doubt about windmill cleaning with helicopter
Hello all,
I am an engineer currently involved in wind energy sector, and I found that windmill cleaning can be made with helicopters. Actually, I found more than 10 companies doing it now.
I found that the maximum wind speed at which the helicopter can clean is at 20 knots, and I do not understand if this is the helicopter limit or whether the water jet does not spot on the blade. Does anybody know?
Thanks a lot,
I am an engineer currently involved in wind energy sector, and I found that windmill cleaning can be made with helicopters. Actually, I found more than 10 companies doing it now.
I found that the maximum wind speed at which the helicopter can clean is at 20 knots, and I do not understand if this is the helicopter limit or whether the water jet does not spot on the blade. Does anybody know?
Thanks a lot,
Is the windmill stopped? Are the blades feathered? I'd think it would be laughable unless the blades are stopped. Leaving them unfeathered would also be easier to to hit the blade cord head on with your water cannon. 20 Knots seems like a lot and it all depends on how close you'd feel comfortable hovering along a blade. It isn't like powerline insulator wash where the things you are washing are small. I'd think that if you are feeling it might be cost effective to do it with a helicopter , it might be less expensive to do one blade at a time from the ground with some sort of lift device that could get you close to being able to reach each blade with a nozzle and brush. How high is the blade root when the blade is straight down? You could have a much larger water tank if pumped from the ground as well. Let us know how this goes for you. It is always nice to see what works with helicopters. Who thought a giant chain-saw suspended from a helicopter would ever work. Surprise, it works pretty well but it is freakin' scary to watch or fly.
Galtor, that limitation would probably be due to operational safety.
roscoe1, state-of-the-art turbines have a tower height of up to 140m. Equipment capable of reaching that height probably won't be more cost-efficient than helicopters.
kj, I think you could turn the turbine into any desired direction but you wouldn't want to blast against a 20+kt wind.
roscoe1, state-of-the-art turbines have a tower height of up to 140m. Equipment capable of reaching that height probably won't be more cost-efficient than helicopters.
kj, I think you could turn the turbine into any desired direction but you wouldn't want to blast against a 20+kt wind.
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Reading the answers, I think it might be just a compromise of the windmill. If the windspeed is higher, probably the owner of the windmill will want to use it and get energy.
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If the windspeed is higher, probably the owner of the windmill will want to use it and get energy.
Looks pretty good though, a new method for aviation to support a still emerging energy source. Good for that company to rise to the challenge. Usable both onshore and offshore.
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I'm surprised that the efficiency gains from cleaning the rotors are such
that cleaning by a rotary asset is deemed cost effective.
Do they not use covalent coating techniques (a la solar panels) to minimise build up?
that cleaning by a rotary asset is deemed cost effective.
Do they not use covalent coating techniques (a la solar panels) to minimise build up?