Power - Wind Power Testing at UNAVCO through 2005, Phase 1


Wind Power Testing at UNAVCO through 2005, Phase 1

The purpose of phase one of the wind generator testing is to become familiar with the general setup and power characteristics of the system. This includes tower construction, cabling, regulation and integration with a solar system. Though not a likely field system, this setup, located in a generally windy location south of Boulder, demonstrates constant and gusty wind conditions as well as stale weather conditions.

System: The Marshall Test site contains a power system which includes a battery bank, solar and wind charging systems. A permanant VSAT dish is located to test VSAT control boxes before they are sent out. Various receivers and radio modem systems are also tested at this location.

Panel:This is the power panel for the wind system. It contains a C40 Diversion Charge Controller (white w/ fins), 2 shunts (black, top) to measure current from generator and solar regulator), data logger (black box, middle), 50A breaker (grey, next to C40), stop switch, Freewave radio modem (grey, bottom) and diversion load (silver, attached to bottom of box).

Tower: The tower is 24 feet tall, guyed with 4 5/32 braided stainless cable. For this setup, the anchor points are 4 30" steel auger style ground anchors. Each guy wire is approximately 21’ in length. The pole is constructed of two 10’ sections coupled together and one 4’ section clamped to the top, attached to the generator. Three 8 guage wires run inside the tower to a junction box at the botom, where there is a lightning arrestor.

Other site photos:

Configuration:

This site serves as a test site for our power, GPS and communications equipment. The configuration during the test includes:

Load

Power Source:

Power Regulation:

Batteries:

Data Logging:

Data and Graphs

Graph Key

April 14, 2002 - Duration: 1 day, 5 second intervals

May 6, 2002 - Duration: 14 days, 1 minute intervals

May 28, 2002 - Duration: 8 days, 30 second intervals

Results

Going into the test, it was known that the system load would not be enough to need the full capacity of the generator and solar panels combined. Because the site experiences non-windy periods, unhooking the solar system was not an option.

Throughout the test, the system appeared to perform reliably and consistently. The only problem we had appears to have been a defective circuit breaker. It was replaced with a higher rated, self resetting unit. Ice, extreme gusts and other weather appears to have not affected the unit. During this test, no lighting storms had occurred.

From the data obtained and seen in the graphs linked to above, it is seen that the system displayed two unwanted characteristics:

  1. unwanted voltage spikes during high-wind/gusty periods

  2. competition between the two regulators

A power filter can easily solve the first issue without changes to the system setup, however, the second issue is a little more complicated. Because both controllers are attempting to regulate the batteries using phased and pulse width modulated techniques, the current draws from the regulators are constantly changing. Since the regulators are not clocked together, their readings are taken at different points in each cycle. This appears to be causing interference in the charging cycles of each device.

Fortunately, phase two should prove to weed out the issues seen above as we will construct a likely field configuration and reduce the output of the generator to match the system power requirements. This will be done by disconnecting one or two of the three internal windings of the generator. If the overall power delivery of the solar and wind units are kept under 40 amps, then a single Trace C-40 will be able to regulate both power sources.

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Article ID: 465
Created: March 27, 2010
Last Updated: March 27, 2010
Author: Beth Bartel

Online URL: https://kb.unavco.org/article/power-wind-power-testing-at-unavco-through-2005-phase-1-465.html