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In a technical paper to be delivered at the 23rd
ASME Wind Energy Symposium in January, the US-DOE's National Renewable
Energy Laboratory (NREL) shows that Bergey 1 kW and 10 kW wind turbines rank
well against other American wind turbines for low noise. In fact, the 1 kW
BWC XL.1 was the quietest turbine tested, even though it was not the smallest
turbine in the test program. The NREL tests also document the significant
noise reduction that Bergey Windpower has achieved with a new rotor design for
its 10 kW turbine.
The technical paper "Acoustic Tests of Small
Wind Turbines", authored by Paul Migliore, Jeroen van Dam, and Arlinda
Husky, will be presented January
5-8 2004 in Reno, Nevada. A copy of the full paper (PDF,
700 KB) is available by clicking
here.
The NREL noise tests included products from
Bergey Windpower, Southwest Windpower, Northern Power, and Atlantic Orient Corp.
(now a Canadian company). The tests were performed using the IEC
international standard and the results are presented for both the noise volume
right at the wind turbine (sound power level) and at a specified distance from
the turbine (sound pressure level). The results are presented against
background sound levels and in some cases the test data could not distinguish
between the turbine noise and the background noise.
This was particularly
true for the Bergey XL.1. For the XL.1 the NREL technical paper states
"The measured values are quite low and the apparent sound power level at 8
m/s cannot be reported because the turbine noise level could not be separated
from the background noise."
Probably the best product-to-product comparison
available in the technical paper is the apparent sound power levels at a wind
speed of 9 m/s (20 mph), as provided in Table 1 of the paper. These
results are summarized below for current production models. Please note
that sound power level can not be directly compared to the noise scale used in
municipal noise ordinances because it does not take into account the reduction
in noise level as you get farther away from the noise source.
| Brand |
Model |
Rated
Power |
Diameter |
Rotor
Area |
Sound
Power Level* |
| Southwest |
Air
X |
400
W |
1.1
m |
1.0
m2 |
81.3
dB |
| Southwest |
Whisper
H40 |
900
W |
2.1
m |
3.5
m2 |
87.4
dB |
| Bergey |
XL.1 |
1,000
W |
2.5
m |
4.9
m2 |
75.8
dB |
| Bergey |
Excel |
10
kW |
6.2
m |
29.9
m2 |
92.3
dB |
| Atlantic
Orient Corp. |
15/50 |
50
kW |
15
m |
177
m2 |
101.9
dB |
| Northern
Power |
NW
100 |
100
kW |
19.1
m |
287
m2 |
95.1
dB |
The NREL technical paper makes the point that
small wind turbine manufacturers have made product improvements over the past
few years that have significantly reduced the noise emissions from their
products. "We're pleased to see our products rank so well in the first
comprehensive noise test of U.S. small wind turbines. We have
put quite an effort into noise reduction in the last five years and we have made
good progress. We will continue to make low noise a priority in our
R&D program" noted Mike Bergey, president of Bergey Windpower.
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