Erwin Swart
Well-Known Member
Looking for a wind generator and want to know which brand has your preference
My own thoughts are that you should spend the money on more solar if you have any space left. A small wind-gen (e.g. Rutland 913) won't produce very much for the cost involved.
@Mistroma: usage for weekend up to 7 days off-shore trips. Would like to keep fridge running, using al nav instruments plus auto pilot (no wind vane which is still on wishlist); all light bulbs has been exchanged by LED. 270Amp multi-purpose batteries. Do also have solar panel though this isnt charging overnight
Looking to the latest wind generators like silent wind, air breeze, superwind, others? Most important is limited noise, reliability and life span
That adds up to quite a lot of current.@Mistroma: usage for weekend up to 7 days off-shore trips. Would like to keep fridge running, using al nav instruments plus auto pilot (no wind vane which is still on wishlist); all light bulbs has been exchanged by LED. 270Amp multi-purpose batteries. Do also have solar panel though this isnt charging overnight
Looking to the latest wind generators like silent wind, air breeze, superwind, others? Most important is limited noise, reliability and life span
I doubt a wind-gen will be that much help to be honest. It will help reduce power drain on overnight sails if F4 upwards Batteries seem undersized for the gear you'd run when sailing overnight. Output won't be great downwind and the Rutland tends to spin uselessly when heeled (a line to the tail fin will help greatly). A towed generator will give you more power than you are likely to need when sailing in a moderate breeze. Nav. lights use a lot of power but it sounds as if you have uograded them already. Power saving measures have the biggest impact of anything else you can try.@Mistroma: usage for weekend up to 7 days off-shore trips. Would like to keep fridge running, using al nav instruments plus auto pilot (no wind vane which is still on wishlist); all light bulbs has been exchanged by LED. 270Amp multi-purpose batteries. Do also have solar panel though this isnt charging overnight
Looking to the latest wind generators like silent wind, air breeze, superwind, others? Most important is limited noise, reliability and life span
You’d do better with a solar panel as none of the turbines provide anything useful under 20 knots
@Mistroma: usage for weekend up to 7 days off-shore trips. Would like to keep fridge running, using al nav instruments plus auto pilot (no wind vane which is still on wishlist); all light bulbs has been exchanged by LED. 270Amp multi-purpose batteries. Do also have solar panel though this isnt charging overnight
Looking to the latest wind generators like silent wind, air breeze, superwind, others? Most important is limited noise, reliability and life span
The instructions for Rutland turbines expressly say not to switch off at the controller when there is much wind, although even when asked, they declined to give a figure for either amps or windspeed.Our Superwind gets turned off by switch below. No need to tie it off.
Same here, pretty sure in the last decade plus it's cost more Ah in shading a panel than the few days a year it actually produced anything useful.In common with several others I know, I binned my Aerogen. It was useful in the UK to top up batteries when boat left on mooring all week but when out and about sailing and on long trips, produced little power. Solar far cheaper and more output, even on overcast days.