xxChrisxx wrote:Wind turbines work because they are static, and the wind passes over them. The energy is provided by the wind. When you are 'creating' the wind by pushing the turbine through the air. You are providing the power to do this.
And as we all know from the laws of thermodynamics, you can't get out more than you put in. So an exposed turbine will always be less efficient than not having it at all. The laws of physics apply at all speeds.
You´re assuming you´re moving the car to create wind and use that wind to generate energy, and that´s wrong. The car is moving anycase, and it weights around a ton, that´s what is determining the power requirements, not the wind turbine
The added drag of a small wind turbine will change the power needs almost nothing
I guess most of you have seen graphs about drag and petrol consumption, and it´s from 100-110km/h when drag becomes a crucial factor and consumption start increasing exponentially. Below that speed drag is important but not so determining. Since a car has a lot of drag by itself, does a small wind turbine really change the power requirements of the car at those speeds where drag is not that crucial?
Does anyone of you have any real analysis apart from funny pictures? If you think engineers who designed this are complete idiots ok, but I tend to think engineers are usually more reasonable than forum members, even when many of us are engineers too, so to put those engineers down please provide something more reasonable, if you can