Mike P.
Well-known member
Not sure the linked the URL I copied from Forestgnome's post properly but here it is from the Union Leader on 2/10.
http://www.unionleader.com/article.a...9-5a375c2d59d2
Apparently they don't belong near the AT (I agree, not near, but maybe within long distance sight) & not off Nantucket. (Not so sure but hooking into the grid seems hard in both cases) I shouldn't be complaining, I own stock in a wind co.
Why do they always seem to want to build these way off the grid on quiet wooded hillsides so you need miles of new forest roads or in the ocean where you need undersea cable?
Dixville Notch? Well, the locals might like it, they might think they would be self-sufficient - Do they know they will likely share the juice & won't be in some isolationist commune? Maybe that's a good location for shipping the power to the new $$$$$ development to be built around the Mt. Washington Hotel?
Why can't they be built on the grid. My guess is that you wouldn't need a 410 foot tower if you affixed these to buildings in Boston, Worcester, (there is one in/near Worcester, MA) Manchester, Hartford, NYC, etc. Airport approaches aside but it really hasn't been an issue for pilots, so some other buildings become artificially as tall as the Pru, Cityplace, the Mass Mutual building in Springfield, etc.
If they build them near cities, you don't need new roads (& additional lumbering or wait, that's an added bonus like the logging in CT everytime they add a new development CT logging at work- not everyone is apparently against Sprawl....) How about near the Malls, Anyone complaining about ruining the scenic view of the mall next to the highway?
Or, how about since the grid runs across hillsides already on tall towers, why not affix blades or a wind tower next to every high voltage, tower that criss-crosses the countryside already? It's part of the grid, you are already maintaining the brush under the towers & hooking up to the grid would be easy. There's aleady an ugly tower there too.
What about along the highway? If you are putting them up on 400 foot towers, won't it be windy that high any way? On hot summer days, thermals from the sun beating on the concrete (macadam) will generate it's own wind) Does anyone take a scenic ride to work on a highway & think how lucky they are for not having a windmill on scenic I-95 in Warwick, New Haven, I-84 in East Harford or I-91 in Enfield, Meriden or Enfield?
(maybe you don't want them near malls or on city buildings as it might increase base jumping & drunk teens trying to do something stupid. Will the blades still spin with a pair of sneakers tied around one blade? also another blank urban canvas to have spray painted....)
Put them in the 100 Mile Wilderness or only Environmential Terrorist will know they are there. Will you put police out there 24/7 to keep a rogue ATC, SC or AMC'er from sabatoging it? - How about putting one or two at every State Police Barrack or local municipal police station? Fixes the enforcement issue at no cost. Anyone concerned about pigeon's in cities getting confused by the turbines.
Wind is a great renewable power source. Do we need 30 turbines together or just 30 turbines linked to the grid. When I travel to PA, along I-81, there is a spot out in the distance with several wind turbines. I'm not there for a scenic respite but seeing them doesn't offend me either over the trees. Seeing them in Southern New England or alonge the GSP in NJ wouldn't bother me. (of for that matter 15 -18 miles off the coast so they would look like a small item from the beach, just like the container ships & barges)
Having them in the ADK's, Whites or Greens or even near Greylock or the Catskills might (would) bother me. With the economy in the Catskills, I'd think this would have come up. - I think it has, they are also dealing with farmland being leased for Nat Gas drilling but the crash in fossil fuel cost (so far) has put this on a back burner until prices go back up.
http://www.unionleader.com/article.a...9-5a375c2d59d2
Apparently they don't belong near the AT (I agree, not near, but maybe within long distance sight) & not off Nantucket. (Not so sure but hooking into the grid seems hard in both cases) I shouldn't be complaining, I own stock in a wind co.
Why do they always seem to want to build these way off the grid on quiet wooded hillsides so you need miles of new forest roads or in the ocean where you need undersea cable?
Dixville Notch? Well, the locals might like it, they might think they would be self-sufficient - Do they know they will likely share the juice & won't be in some isolationist commune? Maybe that's a good location for shipping the power to the new $$$$$ development to be built around the Mt. Washington Hotel?
Why can't they be built on the grid. My guess is that you wouldn't need a 410 foot tower if you affixed these to buildings in Boston, Worcester, (there is one in/near Worcester, MA) Manchester, Hartford, NYC, etc. Airport approaches aside but it really hasn't been an issue for pilots, so some other buildings become artificially as tall as the Pru, Cityplace, the Mass Mutual building in Springfield, etc.
If they build them near cities, you don't need new roads (& additional lumbering or wait, that's an added bonus like the logging in CT everytime they add a new development CT logging at work- not everyone is apparently against Sprawl....) How about near the Malls, Anyone complaining about ruining the scenic view of the mall next to the highway?
Or, how about since the grid runs across hillsides already on tall towers, why not affix blades or a wind tower next to every high voltage, tower that criss-crosses the countryside already? It's part of the grid, you are already maintaining the brush under the towers & hooking up to the grid would be easy. There's aleady an ugly tower there too.
What about along the highway? If you are putting them up on 400 foot towers, won't it be windy that high any way? On hot summer days, thermals from the sun beating on the concrete (macadam) will generate it's own wind) Does anyone take a scenic ride to work on a highway & think how lucky they are for not having a windmill on scenic I-95 in Warwick, New Haven, I-84 in East Harford or I-91 in Enfield, Meriden or Enfield?
(maybe you don't want them near malls or on city buildings as it might increase base jumping & drunk teens trying to do something stupid. Will the blades still spin with a pair of sneakers tied around one blade? also another blank urban canvas to have spray painted....)
Put them in the 100 Mile Wilderness or only Environmential Terrorist will know they are there. Will you put police out there 24/7 to keep a rogue ATC, SC or AMC'er from sabatoging it? - How about putting one or two at every State Police Barrack or local municipal police station? Fixes the enforcement issue at no cost. Anyone concerned about pigeon's in cities getting confused by the turbines.
Wind is a great renewable power source. Do we need 30 turbines together or just 30 turbines linked to the grid. When I travel to PA, along I-81, there is a spot out in the distance with several wind turbines. I'm not there for a scenic respite but seeing them doesn't offend me either over the trees. Seeing them in Southern New England or alonge the GSP in NJ wouldn't bother me. (of for that matter 15 -18 miles off the coast so they would look like a small item from the beach, just like the container ships & barges)
Having them in the ADK's, Whites or Greens or even near Greylock or the Catskills might (would) bother me. With the economy in the Catskills, I'd think this would have come up. - I think it has, they are also dealing with farmland being leased for Nat Gas drilling but the crash in fossil fuel cost (so far) has put this on a back burner until prices go back up.