Assessing Wind Turbine Foundations for Repowering Longevity

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

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The growth of the US wind industry has led to new challenges for wind turbine foundations, an often overlooked but critical component. ONYX Insight's Ian Prowell, a structural engineer with extensive wind industry experience, describes how early foundations were designed for smaller 1-1.5 MW turbines with a 20 year lifespan. Now, many sites are being "repowered" with larger 2-3 MW turbines, reusing and adding decades more fatigue loading to the same decades-old foundations. Prowell discusses common foundation types, construction methods, failure modes, and monitoring techniques to ensure adequate remaining life during repowering campaigns. Proper foundation assessment before repowering could prevent costly collapses and save project owners millions. Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly email update on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard's StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary Barnes' YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us! Allen Hall: I'm Allen Hall, host of the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast. Foundations are a topic that we received several requests for, and honestly, foundations are not discussed enough. Buried beneath the earth, these massive foundations supporting our wind turbines have to remain steady year after year in some tough conditions. And yet, wind turbine foundations have a great track record. However, As the wind industry expands and turbines grow, new challenges are emerging that demand innovative solutions. So I'm looking forward to our discussion with our guest, Ian Prowell, Principal Engineer with ONYX Insight. And Ian has a Ph. D. in structural engineering plus years of experience in the renewables industry. Ian, welcome to the program. Thank you.  Ian Prowell: Great to chat with you, Allen. Allen Hall: So we have something in common, just to kick this off you went to UCSD. Ian Prowell: Yeah, I did my master's and PhD there. Allen Hall: Yeah, so we just visited that campus. It's quite lovely. It's a good place to get your master's and doctorate from. Ian Prowell: Yeah, yeah. Some people do have problems with focus. The waves call and they end up surfing and  Allen Hall: getting back on the topic of wind turbine foundation. So, Ian, you have a number of years in wind turbine foundations and what's been happening on the scene. Can you just give us a brief history, like where we are today and sort of how we got to where we are?  Ian Prowell: In terms of history, I mean, what you see with current wind turbines, say megawatt plus machines. Generally we're talking about late nineties and on early foundations, we kind of had some basic design philosophies and some ideas on how to do it. But earlier we relied a lot on behavior, concrete and sheer and intention. There were some issues that came up as things went by and w...

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