tyce
Well-Known Member
Quite regularly sailed through the ones in the Irish Sea off barrow, never had an issue.
Perhaps this should be a new thread but bear with me. If wind turbines use the wind energy, convert it to mechanical then electrical energy then they must reduce wind energy to leeward. School boy physics tells us that energy can neither be created nor destroyed, just it's form changes, ie chemical to kinetic in an I/C engine.
So, I would think that hundreds of turbines upwind should, must, reduce wind speeds.
Do they? Have I got this right?
Steve
I would say this is generally correct, ignoring times of both low and high wind speeds when the turbines don't generate (although more recent designs have pushed up the high wind cut-off point). It's a bit like trying to overtake to leeward of another sailing boat: the "dirty air" contains less energy.
Perhaps it's one of those things that the RYA can advise us about?
Is every wind farm charted? Yes.
Can you sail through them? Yes. Simply, you can. Every single wind farm in UK waters.
I've gone through the London Array at Foulger's Gat. The scale of that installation is simply immense. Whatever the rights and wrongs of them are, it's an impressive piece of work.