bergie
Well-Known Member
The calculations were made by applying Superwind’s output curve to the actual AWS from a whole summer of cruising. So yes, mix of sailing and anchoring.I think the link says the wind generator should give 25Wh per 24h, or less, on over 90+% of days?
That's for a mix of sailing and non-sailing days?
Note that the graphs are daily averages for each month. So for wind that’s somewhere around 200-300Wh per day (or about 15% of our daily power consumption).
In the Baltic you usually “Scandinavian moor” with stern anchor and bow tied to land, so anchorages tend to be very protected. And much of the sailing was downwind (so AWS lower than true wind speed, but AWS used as that’s what the wind generator would have to work with).
I totally should re-run these simulations with the 2023 data, and with actual production numbers from our hydrogenerator.


