All Posts Tagged With: "Portland"
EconVergence conference in Portland Friday
Friday, I will be speaking at the EconVergence all about decentralizing and empowering communities with local owned power generation. Noam Chomsky will be speaking that same evening, all at the First Unitarian Church in Portland. Monday we moved the LIM stator using a very substantial forklift as seen in this cell phone photo.
Home at last after visiting the LIM
Prepping the stator to be mounted on the axle.
Just home from another packed trip to check on the LIM and meet with a couple of industry leaders.
Applying the magnet brackets in the rotor.
V-LIM spin test next week, with luck
Pretty astonishing really when you think about it that despite having to replace every single part the V-LIM generator will finally get to spin up and turn on some light bulbs. All this has been accomplished in less than four months whereas the previous fabricator was moving up on a year and hadn’t even assembled the stator.
Reasons behind replacing the various parts, including the axle explain why the LIM was not being completed as promised… it simply couldn’t fit together. Actually, the stator has not been replaced but that was engineered and laser cut in Clackamas but every thing else, every single thing machined or signed off on by the former ‘fabricator’ including the damn trailer he insisted I buy (axles and wheel bearings shot), were worthless.
Rather than be angry, although I clearly am, I am endeavoring to be happy about the spin up and finally, finally getting some power curves and selling some turbines. Honestly, I can’t wait to write a memoir about the LIM and amazingly cool capacitive storage technology. From the first encounter with Coos County’s own Larry, Curly and Moe to the darkly comedic episode of the denial expert and shanty singer cum wind turbine fabricator and his wedding disrupting partner.
Yes, I have just had a glass (maybe two) of champagne
Transporting the V-LIM stator for wiring
Engineers at a faciity in Portland transport the V-LIM stator to be properly wired in anticipation of the first testing of the new generator.
Sadly, the coils wound in Coos County had to be rewound. The ceramic insulation applied by a local powder coater cracked and failed and mitigation attempts to ease the sharp edges of the coil core by the former local fabricator were inadequate causing multiple shorts. All the money invested using local talent may have helped the local economy, I don’t know, but my company has nothing to show for it and is almost a year behind schedule.
Happily, we are making great strides and hope to invite Oregon Department of Energy for the first spin test of the new generator before the end of August. It has been a long hard haul made all that much harder trying to do it here in Coos County… no more!
Home at last… for awhile anyway
It will be a glorious day indeed when I can cut my commute to Portland by about 90 minutes and not only because I will save on time and gas. Am totally fried but will post some details and some photographs on the LIM tomorrow.
‘Young creatives’ hanging on in Portland
Hard times are hitting everywhere but unlike Coos County where young adults flee the area as soon as they have a car and enough money to fill the tank in search of opportunity and some semblance of a life outside of the bars, the police harassment and the failed promises of new jobs Portland appeals to youth.
A Portland economist who has studied the “young creatives” says Sowa is typical.
“It’s not as if it’s great somewhere else,” said Joseph Cortright, chairman of Gov. Ted Kulongoski’s council of economic advisers and author in 2005 of a study of young people and American cities, “The Young and Restless in a Knowledge Economy.”
Cortright said the United States soon will face a shortage of well-educated workers. Baby boomers are retiring, he said, and the rising percentages of women and college graduates in the work force are leveling off.
That, he said, will make winners of cities such as Portland that offer creative, entrepreneurial young people something distinctive, whether it is warm climate, cool culture, a combination of the two or something else entirely.
According to a local union head, the average literacy rate for Coos County’s work force is 5th grade. Whether true or not it seems that there is a decided shortage of young adults in the local economy despite beautiful natural beauty and ample potential to develop a thriving sustainable economy.
Little will change in Coos County until the workforce stop reelecting the same tired old minds that got this county into the mess it is in now. Does a low literacy rate explain why the electorate keep leaders who have implemented policies that make the county unpalatable to young, educated, intelligent and hopefully progressive thinkers?
Coquille’s mayor, Steve Britton, once commented he believed Coquille would be discovered as a retiree haven and make the transition to a service based economy. Personally, I have zero interest in raising my children in an economic environment with so bland a future.
We need ‘young creatives’ in Coos County and we need them in leadership positions because the old farts have really done a lousy job.
Feeding time at the zoo
Here we are in Portland awaiting breakfast with the masses.
Restoration studios, furnishings and historic districts
The new manufacturing facility for the LIM is within walking distance of Portland’s historic district. Within the district are several architectural restoration studios and unique furnishing salons. A great place to start to furnish that beautiful new home one can’t wait to move into.
Making it work in Portland
Naturally each fabricator will have different ways of doing things. Still all methods must follow basic sound practices and when they do not the integrity of an entire project is compromised. Consequently I am very impressed with how our new fabricator for the LIM has assessed the weaknesses and devised methods to salvage consequences of poor design choices and strengthen the whole system.
Will post some pics when I return from Portland
Will post some shots of the LIM later today
Will be in Portland off and on a lot the next few weeks but it is necessary to complete this prototype. Later I will post some discreet shots of the process involved in finalizing this generator.
What a difference a day makes!
Just twenty four little hours and I am recharged and raring to go again. Starting next week my girls and I will be getting to know Portland much better while the LIM is assembled so that we can start exciting electrons and generating power.
Also, I got a note that a commenter on The World is talking about redundancy. Just think, empirically, about power outages in general. They are local events, typically, unless a big DC intertie goes down and then giant swaths of the country go dark. Decentralized power and micro-grids localize both production and distribution and maintain local redundancy as well as contain any failure locally whereas within a centralized system, a local event can have a cascading effect as in the massive 2003 blackouts in the Northeast brought about by one power plant in Ohio.
An analogy suggested to me would be to compare a micro-grid to a cellular phone network and the centralized power grid to the global land line telephone system.