h a l f b a k e r y"This may be bollocks, but it's lovely bollocks."
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With enough wind farm generator towers, the multiple
overlapping
extra long blades can keep out anyone who doesn't want
to risk
being
diced up.
When there is no wind, the surplace energy from the
continuous parallel strip of solar panels and back up
batteries can power the rotations.
As this wall is capable of supplying the electricity needs
of
the entire North American Continent, including Mexico
and
Canada, the cost of construction can be shared.
This means that several problems are solved with one
initiative. Mexico pays for the wall; America gets its
wall;
America meets its global warming responsibilities;
everyone gets cheap electricity.
Kiritimaticentrifugomobile
[calum, Jan 18 2019]
wall of wind turbines
https://interesting...ical-turbine-airiva [xaviergisz, Jun 07 2024]
[link]
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Actually a brilliant solution... which, traditionally, has no place in the Halfbakery. |
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Either 1/2B ideas are becoming too mainstream, or the mainstream is approaching the Halfbaked horizon. |
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High praise, but there are still some great ideas on
hb, though many are indeed rather tame and not
that halfbaked. The croissant count also seldom
goes above ten for anything no matter how great it
is. Maybe we are few now? The last survivors of the
kingdom of Ozymandius: "look on my works ye
mighty and despair" |
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Thoughts: A. Obvious I know, generally - as in, always
- the lowest point on the circule of a turbine blade's tip is
a lot higher than a human head, average or Manute Bol.
The turbines erected for the windfarm wall will need to
have either the blades extended - faster tip speed, more
slicy! - or have the rotor centre dropped so that the wall
can't be evaded by leopard crawling. Perhaps the blade
tips could pass into narrow troughs.
B. Solar and wind energy production are strongly inversely
correlated, so the proposal to keep the blades spinning
seems sound, provided the windfarm wall to separate the
US and Mexico is built on a hill in Scotland.
C. As the idea recognizes, in order to make the wall
properly impenetrable, there will need to be layers of
wind turbines, so that the gaps between circulation of the
blade tips are too small for well timed jumps. This
bashes us into the shadow effect - the upwind turbine
steals wind from the downwind turbine. I am not sure
how we resolve this, perhaps by making the US-side
turbines smaller, repeating this shrinkage for a few
iterations until there is a row of razor sharp pinwheels to
slice the ankle tendons of heretofore lucky immigrants.
D. The wind does not always blow in the same direction.
This is likely as true in Mexico as it is in every other place
I have ever been. This is not a disaster. Perhaps a central
pivoting point could be picked on the US-Mexico border,
and the windfarm wall contraption, mounted on a long
bar on this pivot, could rotate in the breeze. This will of
course create a dynamic border, allowing temporary
annexation of the western states of the US (back) into
Mexico, but it's possible - I can't tell from here, I'm not
the Wizard of Maps - that that temporary annexation
woudl be accompanied by US control over CDMX and
therefore also over the Mexican legislative apparatus, so
it evens out. |
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We're putting you in charge of the final design. |
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//...layers of wind turbines, so that the gaps between circulation of the blade tips are too small for well timed jumps// - this is a fantastic idea - the only people who will be able to make it through the barrier into the USA will be those who spent their youth paying "Prince of Persia" (or any similar 1980's levels, jumps and rotating knives computer game) |
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If the turbines were placed in the sky above Washington, the rising hot air from the Capitol would keep them turning indefinitely. |
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// Either 1/2B ideas are becoming too mainstream, // |
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What a depressing thought. |
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// or the mainstream is approaching the Halfbaked horizon. // |
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Slightly alarming, but also intriguing and amusing. After all, there is a definite trend towards increasing weirdness and irrationality to the point where it will be simply normal to say "You couldn't make it up ..." |
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William Petersen, the producer of CSI, said in an interview that they received unsolicited details of cases from CSI's across the USA and indeed the world, giving details of bizarre deaths - often giving names, dates, and many other verifiable details. These were rejected as potential plotlines because, he said, "If you put that in an allegedly serious TV drama, people would just laugh and say 'Naaaaaah, that could never happen.'" |
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