50 that is enought to use 100 kettles!!:)
One 1 kW wind turbine.
The largest wind turbines in use produce 7 MW (7000 kW).
1 wind turbine can generate 500 houses per year (kw)
Depends on county and the KW of turbine. any were from $5000 $500,000
5000kw/h if the wind is exactly 28 mph.0 kw/h if wind goes above 28 mph500 kw/h at 14 mph0 kw/h at 11 mphThe typical system averages about 8% of rated power. They produce less power in their projected life then the cost to create. They also kill millions of birds and bats each year.
Richard L Puthoff has written: 'Preliminary design of a 100 kW wind turbine generator' -- subject(s): Turbogenerators 'Fabrication and assembly of the ERDA/NASA 100-kilowatt experimental wind turbine' -- subject(s): Wind power, Wind turbines
That depends on how windy the site is. A good windy site (say 6 m/s annual average wind speed) and a 20 kW turbine could give you enough energy (on an annual basis). A less windy, less suitable site (say 4 m/s annual average wind speed) and you would need around 60 kW of turbine. These are extremely crude calculations and if you are putting in a turbine of this size then you should certainly get some wind monitoring data for the site. It is certainly a job for a professional company.
The number of 100 watt light bulbs that can be lit by a wind turbine depends on the specific characteristics and capacity of the turbine. It is determined by the rated power output of the turbine and the power consumption of the light bulbs. Generally, you would need to divide the turbine's rated power by the power consumption of the light bulbs (in this case 100 watts) to estimate the number of bulbs it can light.
Solar panels, or solar water heating is cheaper to produce than wind energy. You can put PV panels and a water heater on your roof for a few thousand (dollars, pounds, etc), but a 10 kW wind turbine (enough for one large home) would be 50 or 60 thousand.
R. Puthoff has written: 'Installation and Checkout of the DOE/NASA Mod-1 2000-kW Wind Turbine Generator'
Kabertene wind farm, in Algeria, has 12 turbines with a total nominal power of 10,200 kW.
The amount of power consumed to rotate one turbine can vary depending on factors such as the size of the turbine, wind speed, and efficiency of the turbine system. On average, a small residential wind turbine may consume around 1-10 kW of power to rotate. Commercial-scale turbines can consume much more power, typically in the range of 1-2 MW.