16 Segmented Turbine Towers; Gamesa and Suzlon Shake Things Up; 400 mile Lightning Bolt?

The Uptime Wind Energy Podcast - En podkast av Allen Hall, Rosemary Barnes, Joel Saxum & Phil Totaro

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Are segmented turbine towers the future as wind turbines climb higher and higher? Siemens Gamesa named a new CEO recently, and Suzlon has restructured--will the business survive? Some incredible electric storms occurred recently, including a 1.3 billion volt storm in South Africa and a 400 mile long lightning bolt across Brazil. Learn more about Weather Guard Lightning Tech’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on YouTube, Twitter, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. Have a question we can answer on the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast? Email us!  Full Transcript: EP16 - Segmented Turbine Towers; Gamesa and Suzlon Shake Things Up; 400 mile Lightning Bolt? Allen Hall: Welcome back I'm Allen hall. Dan: This is the uptime podcast where we talk about wind energy engineering, lightning protection, and ways to keep your wind turbines running. Allen Hall: Great boy, busy weekend wind turbines again. COVID-19 is having a, a, an effect on everything. I'm just trying to follow. All the news is coming in. It's almost difficult to keep track of all the changes that are happening now in the wind turbine industry. So, uh, let's get to it. I mean, Big big, big changes all over the place. Uh, you know, we're seeing all kinds of push towards, uh, offshore wind turbines. And I think that's driving a lot of the management changes that are happening. It's also causing a lot of restructuring to happen and boil boy, uh, talk about chaotic. We're in it right now. Dan: Yeah. So we're going to jump into news in a second, but, so let's talk about this new piece of tech. That is kind of an interesting, so we talked about concrete, um, wind turban towers, and the last couple episodes, specifically the three D printing, but. Now, they're talking a little bit about segmented wind turbine towers as being potentially the lowest cost alternative for when they get really, really tall, which is obviously like in everyone's future. So we're talking about how hub Heights above 100 meters. Um, well, well above that more like 200, 200 plus meters, but obviously there's a thousand meters. Yeah. Well, there's a big problem when yeah. You know, they get above a hundred meters because transportation gets really difficult. So. Um, what do you think of these segmented? So the segmented tower technology is essentially, you know, having segments where you're going to bolt them together and they're going to be easier to ship and you've got to assemble them, but there's going to be much more engineering and. And fasteners and a lot of, a lot of different, like I said, engineering to make these work, but how do you feel about this? Is it going to be viable? Is that make the most sense? Allen Hall: Makes most sense? Cause you can be able to transport it. The biggest problem in wind turbines right now is the ability to transport from factory to site and. That's why you see this big push of factories getting shoved toward the Schwar lights,

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