Vestas Anti-Oscillation Tool, Windspider Tower Builder

Vestas Anti-Oscillation Tool, Windspider Tower Builder

We discuss Vestas' anti-oscillation blade tool, which seems to have a dual purpose, Windspider's self-erecting tower method, and a terrifying way to disguise vaccinations for kids. Fill out our Uptime listener survey and enter to win an Uptime mug!...
7 Minuten

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vor 1 Jahr
We discuss Vestas' anti-oscillation blade tool, which seems to have
a dual purpose, Windspider's self-erecting tower method, and a
terrifying way to disguise vaccinations for kids. Fill out our
Uptime listener survey and enter to win an Uptime mug! Register for
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www.weatherguardwind.comIntelstor - https://www.intelstor.com Phil
Totaro: This is Power Up, where groundbreaking wind energy ideas
become your clean energy future. Here's your hosts, Allen Hall and
Phil Totaro. Allen Hall: Well, Phil, our first idea of the week is
from our friends at Vestas, and it's an anti oscillation tool for
wind turbine blades. And how this patent is described, it's like a
sock for your wind turbine blade with a little bit of a covering
over the trailing edge serrations, and you slide this device on And
it stops oscillations during deployment, when the, when the turbine
may be a little more vulnerable, it's not a full operation, maybe
in lockouts, where you really don't want any lift, and particularly
you don't want any oscillations that could, in theory, Phil Totaro:
Yeah. And maybe it's an idea that GE should have come up with or LM
should have come up with first considering some of the issues
they've had this year. But what's kind of fascinating about this
though, is that this isn't necessarily a new idea from the
perspective of putting a little sock on the end of your wind
turbine blade to protect the tip during a lift. Usually it's for
making sure that you don't damage the serrations or whatever you've
stuck on the trailing edge of the blade. In this case, Vestas and,
and I'm, I'm kind of expressing my opinion or suggestion here that
I think Vestas is basically trying to get an extra 20 years of life
on a patented concept that, They, are potentially using on a daily
basis for that construction purpose. They found another way to
describe that same technology and as an anti oscillation tool.
Allen Hall: You ever seen a device called a slap chopper, Phil? No.
It slices and it dices. Oh, that thing. Yeah, I have. I have. So
what they've To have done, in a sense, is they've taken the
Slapchopper and got a patent for slicing, and then when that got
close to expiring, they came back and said, well, it dices too,
which is a separate patent, and thereby you can extend the same
device for Covering two areas. It's very unique way of patenting
and very effective by the way. It's smart. Phil Totaro: Yeah, it
is. If, if you're trying to capture and protect your IP, but it
also doesn't say much for the patent examiners we've ever had in
this industry who can't seem to recognize that this is what
companies are doing because this is not the first time this has
happened. I can recall a few examples in the past where companies
had You know, had, their 20 years of patent protection on a concept
and then repatented basically the same thing and said, Oh, well,
it's not for cooling. It's for vibration damping, or it's not for
one thing. It's for something else. So it looks like that's what's
happening here. And, I guess kudos to Vestas for trying and maybe
not so many kudos to the U. S. Patent Office for allowing stuff
like this to get pushed Allen Hall: through. Roncopeel made a
living doing that. If you're familiar with Ronco, it's Christmas
time and every Christmas you would have another Ronco product,
which slices, dices, cooked a chicken or something. Phil Totaro:
All at the same time? Allen Hall: So our next idea is from
Windspider and it's a method to basically raise a wind turbine
tower with a crane. It's sort of, an erector set that builds upon
itself. So It kind of hoists itself by its own petard in a way, and
it lifts itself up. You can put more infrastructure behind it. You
lift it up some more, put more infrastructure behind it, and you
can build a turbine tower with it. Really no large external crane.
Everything happens right on the tower itself. This has
applications, Phil. Particularly offshore, I think this makes a
whole bunch of sense. I haven't seen it implemented though. And
this patent is new within the last couple of months. I expect this
one to happen somewhere. Phil Totaro: Yeah, this is one that if
Windspider is going to be able to get enough capital together to do
some kind of a prototype demonstration, they might actually catch
on with doing this, particularly with larger either onshore
machines or certainly offshore machines where Again, minimizing the
amount of crane time is going to become important both from crane
availability as well as how tall they could theoretically make the
towers, because this is basically a method for self erecting a
tower where you can actually put and they actually go into some
detail about how you can actually install the tower based on staves
or segments. And it can be a tower of either concrete or steel
construction or they could even plot this thing to on top of a a
concrete base. We talked a couple of weeks ago about Max Bogle,
making these hybrid towers. You could use this to then construct
the, the steel tube. portion of a hybrid tower at the top. So, it's
it's a clever idea. Our Allen Hall: fun patent of the week isn't
all that fun. And if you've ever been a kid or if you have
children, you realize that syringes are not your friend. And so
when you go visit the doctor for your annual physical, you're
always dreading that, oh, I think you're ready for another tetanus
shot or you need some sort of booster shot, which seems to happen
at every checkup until you're like, 18 years old. Maybe 21. Maybe
until you're 50 at this point. There always seems to be another
booster shot in your medical chart. Well, this inventor, Robert
Smetton decided that enough is enough. We need to make needles more
friendly. So his invention is to modify the syringe barrel with an
attachment that makes it look like a pleasing animal, like a happy
bunny. Or a little puppy dog. So instead of seeing a syringe Headed
for your arm or maybe a lower part of your anatomy. Now you're
seeing this fuzzy little bunny coming at you. So thereby
permanently associating nice fuzzy animals with pain. And I cannot
figure out, Phil, how this patent actually got through the process
and thinking somebody was going to buy it, but here's the Phil
Totaro: thing. People file patents all the time for stuff that
never actually gets built. I hope that this was one of them,
because I gotta be honest. Like this is. Probably the most
terrifying thing that you could ever do to a child because now
it's, it's a fuzzy bunny and it's, it's not even just like the
physical pain associated with the fuzzy bunny. It's a bunny with a
needle poking out of its mouth and face. Like this is absolutely
terrifying. Like I, I don't like needles in the first place. This
would scare the crap out of me. So yeah, I don't, I don't like this
one at all. Allen Hall: But what if it's country specific? Like
you've done in Australia, you'd have a koala bear, a little baby
koala bear with a needle. Phil Totaro: You'd have a hoop snake with
a needle coming out of it. I don't know. Allen Hall: There you go,
right? It just, it just seems terrorizing, but hey, it's a patent.
There's all kinds of crazy patents.

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