Proven Energy is taking some good hits this fall over 70mph gusts +. We will be watching these turbines over the high winds and watching the great production.
Friday Sept 24th 110 KWH with several power outages Saturday Sept 25th 58 KWH with more power outages Sunday Sept 26th 84 KWH Monday Sept 27th 34 KWH by 8:00am
"These north winds have been good to us. In roughly two and a half days of winds, including 10 plus hours of power outages and a most-of-the-day lull in wind speeds on Saturday, our Proven6KW has generated over 250KW--AND, it's still blowing! Blow, baby blow!!" - Proven Owner #2
"Winds blowing from the north @40-50 mph plus. Our Proven6 is proving itself and thriving in that scenario. I'm finding we're still generating peak power plus, often over 7Kw's. We had a 12 hour total of 78 KWH, which averages 6.5 KWH/hour. Not too bad!"
"Storm winds calmed down by around six this morning. Am noticing a pattern: Roughly six days of strong northerly Nikiski winds will enable our turbine to produce enough electricity (750KWH) for an average household's monthly needs. On one hand it's a fairly small interval of time; on the other hand, it does give one an appreciation for what an average household's electrical consumption represents." - Gene Palm, AKWI Producer (Nikiski, Alaska)
Proven Energy #1 Production:
ReplyDeleteFriday Sept 24th 110 KWH with several power outages
Saturday Sept 25th 58 KWH with more power outages
Sunday Sept 26th 84 KWH
Monday Sept 27th 34 KWH by 8:00am
Proven Energy #2 Also 6kW:
ReplyDelete"These north winds have been good to us. In roughly two and a half days of winds, including 10 plus hours of power outages and a most-of-the-day lull in wind speeds on Saturday, our Proven6KW has generated over 250KW--AND, it's still blowing! Blow, baby blow!!" - Proven Owner #2
Proven Energy #2 6kW Proven:
ReplyDelete"Winds blowing from the north @40-50 mph plus. Our Proven6 is proving itself and thriving in that scenario. I'm finding we're still generating peak power plus, often over 7Kw's.
We had a 12 hour total of 78 KWH, which averages 6.5 KWH/hour. Not too bad!"
"Storm winds calmed down by around six this morning. Am noticing a pattern: Roughly six days of strong northerly Nikiski winds will enable our turbine to produce enough electricity (750KWH) for an average household's monthly needs. On one hand it's a fairly small interval of time; on the other hand, it does give one an appreciation for what an average household's electrical consumption represents." - Gene Palm, AKWI Producer (Nikiski, Alaska)
ReplyDelete