Hi Dick,
Kestrel is going through certification at this time. This is good news,
as this
will help them enter the US market with some established credibility.
It has the potential to be a good turbine. And with the Eveready battery
company
behind them, they should have the capital needed to be a solid company.
Last I knew, they do not have a US distributor. Too bad because I want
to test one here!
FYI- I had the opportunity to dismantle and reassemble one in a course I
taught in 2010.
It's built like that proverbial outhouse.
Roy Butler
NABCEP Certified Small Wind Installer®
NABCEP Certified Solar PV Installer®
NYSERDA eligible PV& wind installer
Four Winds Renewable Energy, LLC
8902 Route 46, Arkport, NY 14807
607-324-9747 www.four-winds-energy.com
Join us at the 8th Annual Small Wind Conference
A Gathering of Installers, Manufacturers, Dealers,& Distributors
June 12 and 13, 2012 in Stevens Point, Wisconsin
www.smallwindconference.com
Although no trees were killed in the sending of this message,
a large number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
On 4/3/2012 3:36 PM, Richard L Ratico wrote:
Does anyone have any experience with Kestrel Wind Turbines?
Dick Ratico
Solarwind Electric
--- You wrote:
SWWP has changed their turbines again. They are now called the the Air 30, Air
40 and Air Breeze. The 30 is like the old X land, the 40 is like the old Breeze
Land and the Breeze is like the old Breeze Marine. The Breeze is the only marine
model available. Confusing enough? The 40 and Breeze have a limited lifetime
warranty and all have a new, higher price.
Historically the Air products have lasted fairly well and been moderate
performers. Air X and Air Breeze parts are still available but SWWP has
discontinued support for all other models. We service, sell and recommend them
for small PV/wind hybrid systems. AND...they are still USA made! Hurrah!
Larry Crutcher
Starlight Solar Power Systems
(928) 342-9103
On Apr 3, 2012, at 7:04 AM, Roy Butler wrote:
Hi Drake,
The Air 403/ Air-X/ Air Breeze/ whatever it's name is now, is fairly dependable.
In most wind regimes it's the equivalent of a 10 or 20 watt solar module but
seems to work just fine. FYI- it's ~ 200 watts or so.
It's not the quietest thing though, being a fairly high rpm turbine.
But the Sunforce 600 is not a 600. The rotor diameter tells the truth, making it
somewhere around a 200 - 250 watt machine. Perhaps they have the bugs worked
out but when they first came out, there were many reliability and performance
issues.
What's the application for this?
Roy Butler
--- end of quote ---
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