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From the page: "sometimes high teens, gusts in the low 20's. The faster it turns, the smoother it runs. With 18" diameter rotors, we're putting out a varying current running between 100 and 200 watts. At 30 mph we get about 400 watts. "
Reviewed by Captain-Murphy Jun 03 2008, 11:09am ( 21 reviews ) • speakerfactory.net
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- Reviews of the site
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Reviewed by thestripedone on Oct 07, 4:40pm
Interesting, but I agree about the font.
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Reviewed by amateur6 on Sep 04, 9:01am
I'm interested but can't stand the captions in Impact (the font of LOLCats everywhere). Gah!
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Rated by yellodeere on Nov 12 2008, 3:24pm
American ingenuity at work!
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Rated by ShirlT on Nov 09 2008, 11:47am
A new type of windmill....the exploration for a good renewable source of power. More power for the people. :)
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Rated by unohoo on Nov 04 2008, 5:35pm
this is exciting! "The combined output from all these small rotors really adds up. This Turbine Utilizes Massive Parallel Wind Processing (MPWP) to maximize the wattage generated for a turbine of a given diameter. The winds are averaging in the teens, sometimes high teens, gusts in the low 20's. The faster it turns, the smoother it runs. With 18" diameter rotors, we're putting out a varying current running between 100 and 200 watts. At 30 mph we get about 400 watts."
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Rated by axodys on Sep 10 2008, 1:59pm
A new highly efficient parallel rotor windmill design looks pretty promising.
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Rated by JohnShepler on Jun 11 2008, 4:31pm
Looks like a ham radio antenna, but generates power.
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Rated by barney76 on Jun 11 2008, 12:24pm
where do I get one?