01/12/2010
Product Pick of the Week - Small is Beautiful: The Helix wind turbine
Scott Weinbrandt spent 25 years working in computer technology, including 10 years as an executive at Dell, the direct-sales computer giant, as well as time as a senior vice president at Gateway, the onetime San Diego computer maker that is now part of Acer. During that time, the computer industry moved from centralized mainframes to distributed personal computers.
Now Weinbrandt says he’s seeing the same trend emerging in the renewable energy sector as the president and chairman of Helix Wind, a San Diego startup that specializes in vertical-axis wind turbines. “Big wind is getting a big pushback,” Weinbrandt says.
While many companies are still pursuing big centralized wind farm projects, such as the one near Palm Springs, CA, there’s also a movement to install smaller wind turbines in backyards and on rooftops.
If he’s right about the trend, Weinbrandt has positioned Helix Wind to catch the prevailing breeze by targeting urban residential and commercial customers. “If you look at what we’re doing, our goal is to be the No. 1 small wind solutions provider,” Weinbrandt says.
The helical-shaped turbines developed by Helix Wind founders Ian Gardner and Ken Morgan are visually stunning—they look so much like spinning sculptures that Weinbrandt says some customers are buying them for the product’s aesthetic value. So-called Savonius turbines, such as Helix Wind’s iconic design, are usually considered less efficient at generating electricity than propeller-driven turbines with a horizontal axis. But Weinbrandt says a key benefit of the helical platform is its ability to operate at high torque in lower wind speeds—and to continue operating at high wind speeds.
“What we’ve done is take it to another level,” Weinbrandt says, noting Helix has 43 IP filings in the U.S. and elsewhere, with one patent pending at two trademarks received. “This technology has been refined and one of the key components is the ability to start up in light winds and still sustain high winds without shutting down. Most of our competitors have to shut down at 40 miles per hour.” The cleantech company says it competes with a variety of other vertical-axis turbine makers in the U.S., including Oregon Wind of Portland, OR, and Mariah Power of Reno, NV.
While Helix counts more than 250 different types of small wind companies, Weinbradt says, “We see a consolidation happening. The small mom and pop outfits out there that have technology but no management are falling by the wayside.”
Gardner and Morgan founded the company in 2006, using private funding, and Helix Wind became public through a reverse merger in February with an inactive shell corporation that had no specific business plan. Gardner, who holds a 36 percent stake in the company, continues to serve as CEO and a board member, according to SEC filings. Morgan is no longer involved in Helix Wind, although he continues to hold a 31 percent stake in the company.
Weinbrandt says he also sees opportunities in using Helix Wind’s turbines to power wireless communication base stations that may or may not be connected to local power grids in remote areas of South America, Africa, and the Middle East. The company says its wind turbines also are ideally suited for pumping water in developing nations, and could be used in conjunction with compressor technology for injection pumps used by the petroleum industry to increase oilfield yields.
For more information on the Helix wind turbine please contact Trevor Sievert at ts@windfair.net
Now Weinbrandt says he’s seeing the same trend emerging in the renewable energy sector as the president and chairman of Helix Wind, a San Diego startup that specializes in vertical-axis wind turbines. “Big wind is getting a big pushback,” Weinbrandt says.
While many companies are still pursuing big centralized wind farm projects, such as the one near Palm Springs, CA, there’s also a movement to install smaller wind turbines in backyards and on rooftops.
If he’s right about the trend, Weinbrandt has positioned Helix Wind to catch the prevailing breeze by targeting urban residential and commercial customers. “If you look at what we’re doing, our goal is to be the No. 1 small wind solutions provider,” Weinbrandt says.
The helical-shaped turbines developed by Helix Wind founders Ian Gardner and Ken Morgan are visually stunning—they look so much like spinning sculptures that Weinbrandt says some customers are buying them for the product’s aesthetic value. So-called Savonius turbines, such as Helix Wind’s iconic design, are usually considered less efficient at generating electricity than propeller-driven turbines with a horizontal axis. But Weinbrandt says a key benefit of the helical platform is its ability to operate at high torque in lower wind speeds—and to continue operating at high wind speeds.
“What we’ve done is take it to another level,” Weinbrandt says, noting Helix has 43 IP filings in the U.S. and elsewhere, with one patent pending at two trademarks received. “This technology has been refined and one of the key components is the ability to start up in light winds and still sustain high winds without shutting down. Most of our competitors have to shut down at 40 miles per hour.” The cleantech company says it competes with a variety of other vertical-axis turbine makers in the U.S., including Oregon Wind of Portland, OR, and Mariah Power of Reno, NV.
While Helix counts more than 250 different types of small wind companies, Weinbradt says, “We see a consolidation happening. The small mom and pop outfits out there that have technology but no management are falling by the wayside.”
Gardner and Morgan founded the company in 2006, using private funding, and Helix Wind became public through a reverse merger in February with an inactive shell corporation that had no specific business plan. Gardner, who holds a 36 percent stake in the company, continues to serve as CEO and a board member, according to SEC filings. Morgan is no longer involved in Helix Wind, although he continues to hold a 31 percent stake in the company.
Weinbrandt says he also sees opportunities in using Helix Wind’s turbines to power wireless communication base stations that may or may not be connected to local power grids in remote areas of South America, Africa, and the Middle East. The company says its wind turbines also are ideally suited for pumping water in developing nations, and could be used in conjunction with compressor technology for injection pumps used by the petroleum industry to increase oilfield yields.
For more information on the Helix wind turbine please contact Trevor Sievert at ts@windfair.net
- Source:
- Helix Power
- Author:
- Posted by Trevor Sievert, Online editorial Journalist / Helix Power
- Email:
- ts@windfair.net
- Link:
- www.windfair.net/...
- Keywords:
- Helix Wind, Helix Wind Turbine, wind energy, wind farm, rotorblade, wind power, wind turbine