![]() ![]() Thanks for looking and I hope this gives you some ideas for your own projects. I will be continuing work on the turbine and once I have the various stages finished I shall post the Instructables. I may even put my VAWT build on hold for now to work on this turbine as I think it has more potential to get me to the goal of charging batteries for an electric bike project sooner than the VAWT. These instructions will show you how to build this PVC turbine, how to make blades for your wind turbine, how to use a multimeter to record electrical data and. The results speak for themselves, you can see that the blades catch even the slightest breeze. ![]() ![]() I already have my brain in gear and a rest of the turbine is already taking shape. I had a 1mtr length of 6" PVC sewer pipe left over from my VAWT built and decided that i would use it to make a set of blades to see if my idea was valid enough to continue to build a horizontal wind turbine.įor the video the rotor is mounted on a test stand with a clamp. I discovered that the drum was mounted on a aluminum casting that had chunky bearings that though would be perfect to make a wind turbine with, the rotor of any turbine is the hardest part of the build and to find some thing this perfect I just had to see if it would work. The idea came to me when I dismantled an old washing machine to get the stainless steel drum to make a patio heater. I recently had an idea for a horizontal wind turbine. NOTE: This was a proof of concept project, just to show that it is possible to use the casting from an old washing machine to make a rotor, This project is now on hold until I finish my VAWT and other projects I am working on. ![]()
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