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  The Wind Turbine Yaw
Mechanism
The wind turbine yaw mechanism is used to turn the wind turbine rotor
against the wind.
Yaw
Error The wind turbine is said to have a yaw error,
if the rotor is not perpendicular to the wind. A yaw error implies that a
lower share of the energy in the wind will be running through the rotor
area. (The share will drop to the cosine of the yaw error, for those of
you who know math).
If this were the only thing that happened, then yaw
control would be an excellent way of controlling the
power input to the wind turbine rotor. That part of the rotor which is
closest to the source direction of the wind, however, will be subject to a
larger force (bending torque) than the rest of the rotor. On the one hand,
this means that the rotor will have a tendency to yaw against the wind
automatically, regardless of whether we are dealing with an upwind or a
downwind turbine. On the other hand, it means that the blades will be
bending back and forth in a flapwise direction for each turn of the rotor.
Wind turbines which are running with a yaw error are therefore subject to
larger fatigue
loads than wind turbines which are yawed in a perpendicular direction
against the wind. |
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Photograph © 1998 Soren Krohn |
Yaw
Mechanism
 Almost all horizontal
axis wind turbines use forced yawing, i.e. they use a mechanism
which uses electric motors and gearboxes to keep the turbine yawed against
the wind.
The image shows the yaw mechanism of a typical 750 kW
machine seen from below, looking into the nacelle. We can see the yaw
bearing around the outer edge, and the wheels from the yaw motors
and the yaw brakes inside. Almost all manufacturers of upwind machines
prefer to brake the yaw mechanism whenever it is unused. The yaw mechanism
is activated by the electronic controller which several times per second
checks the position of the wind vane on the
turbine, whenever the turbine is running.
Cable Twist
Counter
 Cables carry the current from the wind turbine
generator down through the tower. The cables, however, will become more
and more twisted if the turbine by accident keeps yawing in the same
direction for a long time. The wind turbine is therefore equipped with a
cable twist counter which tells the controller that it is time to
untwist the cables.
Occasionally you may therefore see a wind turbine
which looks like it has gone berserk, yawing continuously in one direction
for five revolutions.
Like other safety equipment in the turbine there is
redundancy in the system. In this case the turbine is also equipped with a
pull switch which is activated if the cables become too twisted.
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