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  2. History of wind power - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_wind_power

    The world's first megawatt-sized wind turbine near Grandpa's Knob Summit, Castleton, Vermont. [40] Experimental wind turbine at Nogent-le-Roi, France, 1955. A forerunner of modern horizontal-axis utility-scale wind generators was the WIME D-30 in service in Balaklava, near Yalta, USSR from 1931 until 1942. This was a 100 kW generator on a 30 m ...

  3. Windmill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windmill

    The windmills at Kinderdijk in the village of Kinderdijk, Netherlands is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. A windmill is a structure that converts wind power into rotational energy using vanes called sails or blades, by tradition specifically to mill grain (), but in some parts of the English-speaking world, the term has also been extended to encompass windpumps, wind turbines, and other applications.

  4. James Blyth (engineer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Blyth_(engineer)

    James Blyth (4 April 1839 – 15 May 1906) was a Scottish electrical engineer and academic at Anderson's College, now the University of Strathclyde, in Glasgow.He was a pioneer in the field of electricity generation through wind power and his wind turbine, which was used to light his holiday home in Marykirk, was the world's first-known structure by which electricity was generated from wind power.

  5. Henrik Stiesdal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henrik_Stiesdal

    Henrik Stiesdal (born April 14, 1957) is a Danish inventor and businessman in the modern wind power industry. In 1978, he designed one of the first wind turbines representing the so-called "Danish Concept" which dominated the global wind industry through the 1980s. [1] Until 2014, Stiesdal was the chief technology officer of Siemens Wind Power ...

  6. Wind turbine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wind_turbine

    Around the time of World War I, American windmill makers were producing 100,000 farm windmills each year, mostly for water-pumping. [15] By the 1930s, use of wind turbines in rural areas was declining as the distribution system extended to those areas. [16] A forerunner of modern horizontal-axis wind generators was in service at Yalta, USSR, in ...

  7. NASA wind turbines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NASA_wind_turbines

    The NASA/GE MOD-1 wind turbine in Boone, North Carolina was the world's first turbine to produce 2 MW. NASA contracted with General Electric in 1978 to scale up from the MOD-0A with a 10-fold increase in power. The Mod-1 was the first wind turbine in the world to produce 2 megawatts and also General Electric's first wind turbine.

  8. William Kamkwamba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Kamkwamba

    The first wind turbine. William Kamkwamba (born August 5, 1987, in Kasungu, Malawi), is a Malawian inventor, engineer, and author. He gained renown in his country in 2001 when he built a wind turbine to power multiple electrical appliances in his family's house in Wimbe, 23 kilometres (14 mi) east of Kasungu, using blue gum trees, bicycle parts, and materials collected in a local scrapyard.

  9. List of windmills - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_windmills

    See List of windmills in the Netherlands; Virtually every small town and polder in the Netherlands has one or more windmills. The Zaanstreek alone has had over a thousand industrial windmills, each with a name and well-documented history (see list of windmills at Zaanse Schans). Other well-known windmills are the windmills at Kinderdijk.