| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE NEW HIGH
EFFICIENCY WIND TURBINE
PASS CHRISTIAN, MS (April 14, 2004) – Hunt Aviation,
Corp is conducting tests on a high efficiency vertical axis wind turbine
prototype that based on company engineering studies may produce over twice
as much power as a conventional horizontal axis wind turbine, which potentially
could be a disruptive technology for the wind power industry that has
struggled to obtain efficiencies above twenty percent using rotor blade
technology. The new turbine was originally developed as a low drag wind
turbine to harness power from the air for the Gravityplane while gliding
and now the new design is being commercialized to produce wind power.
“Our wind turbine is capable of being used for many applications
for which rotor style wind turbines cannot be readily used because the
wind can come from any direction and its flat, rectangular shape will
fit on any horizontal surface. We are designing models to power cell towers,
for roof top installation, power barge installation, and to power water
pumps for municipal water supply systems, to power portable office building,
and we are designing units to replace sails on wind powered boats that
will generate and store power,” Gene Cox, Hunt Aviation’s
President, stated. “We hope to have our first wind turbine powered
boat constructed within two months. The craft will produce it greatest
power by going directly into the wind. There are no sails to put up or
take down and no tacking is required. The design allows single person
operation. Further, the wind turbine produces and stores power and provides
heating and air conditioning while sitting in the harbor or at anchor
off-shore. Power is stored as compressed air in pontoons. The compressed
air, using pneumatic motors, can drive propulsion systems, generators
for electrical power, comfort control devices, or any other mechanical
device. Air compression produces the heat of compression. The heat can
be used or be rejected to the environment and the air expanded to create
cooling.”
International patents for the wind turbine that was invented by Gravityplane
inventor, Robert D. Hunt, were filed last month. The wind turbine uses
the effect of drag to harness wind power instead of using lift as conventional
bladed wind turbines do. “I grew up around the seafood industry
in Mississippi and was always interested in the old sailing schooners
used by the fishermen,” Hunt explained. “The fisherman knew
that to have enough power to dredge oysters you had to use drag instead
of lift. They sailed on a reach using lift to power their sail boats for
greater speed, then once at the oyster reefs, they would swing a sail
out to each side of the schooner in a process known as ‘wing-to-wing’.
The wind would then push the sails downwind using drag to have enough
power to pull the large steel oyster dredge across the heavy oyster shells.”
“I realized that a wind turbine using drag would be more powerful
and then I designed it to have less overall drag than a conventional rotor
blade style wind turbine by mounting shutters onto a rotating disk and
having the shutters fold down into the disk as they move into the wind.
Then the shutters open to catch the wind on the opposite side of the wind
turbine and are pushed backward as they apply a force against the disk.
One of the many advantages of my wind turbine is that because of the high
degree of torque generated it can operate in very low wind speeds.”
Hunt Aviation is developing a program for municipalities to mount the
company's turbines on city water towers to provide water service and to
supply additional electrical power that may be used by the cities for
less than they currently pay for pumping water. “The towers are
already there and it is simply a matter of sitting one of our wind turbines
on top of it, which allows the cities to do something good for the environment
while they save money,” Cox stated. “We encourage any city
that wishes to obtain more information regarding this application to contact
us.”
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