- #1
JTC
- 100
- 6
I tried yesterday with the gyro and did not make myself clear. So let me try with a windmill, please.
I look at a windmill and I see the blades are spinning. Thus, the shaft axis has an angular velocity.
I can ballpark and check the angular velocity with my eyes.
I want a ballpark approximation on the power being generated.
But I am NOT concerned with efficiency or electricity.
I do know that P = Torque * angular velocity. = T * w
I know (see) the angular velocity.
Someone tells me that that windmill is known to generate Power, P.
So my question is: where is the torque, what is generating it? How does this generator work? Does the generator apply a REVERSE torque on the axis of the windmill (reverse to the angular velocity), such that the product of T and w is negative and is this an estimate of the power generated?
Again, I do not care about electricity or efficiency of wind capture.
I want to use this formula -- P = T w -- to estimate the power generated, but I do NOT see where the T is coming from.
Please do not tell me to look at the electrical wiring of a generator. I want to SHIELD myself from the electricity and the wind and put a black box around this problem and get a simple approximation using P = Tw
Somehow, there must be a Torque and it must be supplied by the generator. Or do I assume that there is a Torque from the windmill? But there cannot be a Torque because the angular velocity is constant. Unless the generator supplies a resisting torque through friction. I just don't understand how this works.
I look at a windmill and I see the blades are spinning. Thus, the shaft axis has an angular velocity.
I can ballpark and check the angular velocity with my eyes.
I want a ballpark approximation on the power being generated.
But I am NOT concerned with efficiency or electricity.
I do know that P = Torque * angular velocity. = T * w
I know (see) the angular velocity.
Someone tells me that that windmill is known to generate Power, P.
So my question is: where is the torque, what is generating it? How does this generator work? Does the generator apply a REVERSE torque on the axis of the windmill (reverse to the angular velocity), such that the product of T and w is negative and is this an estimate of the power generated?
Again, I do not care about electricity or efficiency of wind capture.
I want to use this formula -- P = T w -- to estimate the power generated, but I do NOT see where the T is coming from.
Please do not tell me to look at the electrical wiring of a generator. I want to SHIELD myself from the electricity and the wind and put a black box around this problem and get a simple approximation using P = Tw
Somehow, there must be a Torque and it must be supplied by the generator. Or do I assume that there is a Torque from the windmill? But there cannot be a Torque because the angular velocity is constant. Unless the generator supplies a resisting torque through friction. I just don't understand how this works.
Last edited: