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Making a Simple Wind Turbine for my O Gauge Layout

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  • Member since
    September 2015
  • 18 posts
Making a Simple Wind Turbine for my O Gauge Layout
Posted by baggetta on Sunday, March 20, 2016 7:51 AM

I've been looking at those expensive towering wind turbines you often see scattered through some train layouts.  Well I decided to make one for my Tombstone Southwest RR, so I set in search of some motor device I could use.  I found some of those hand held summer fans you see kids walking around with in hot weather over at the Dollar Tree.  They were only $1.00 each so I bought a few of them (figuring I coulduse the motors for other projects as well).  I took them apart (really easy) and gutted the insides of the nice framework, leaving only the motor.  While doing this I decided that maybe I should make a small wind farm for my layout instead, so I wired three of the fans together.  They normally run on triple A batteries, but I hooked them up to a transformer block I had lying around along with a toggle switch I put in my fun box and they ran beautifully together. 

I took off the cheap flimsy plastic fan blades and used them as a pattern to cut out some thin wood blades from 1/8" birch plywood and glued these in place of the flimsy blades.  Work well.  I also made a false building to tack these on and low and behold I had not just one turbine but three on my Tombstone Wind Farm (owned and operated by Wyatt Earp.  Earp, always trying to make a buck in the old days, would have loved being apart of this money making project for the community -- if they had the technology then.)  Here's some pictures of the gutting process and a short video of the wind farm in action.


Hope you enjoyed looking at this.

Tombstone Southwest RR

  • Member since
    November 2015
  • 211 posts
Posted by JTrains on Sunday, March 20, 2016 7:57 AM

baggetta

I found some of those hand held summer fans you see kids walking around with in hot weather over at the Dollar Tree.  They were only $1.00 each so I bought a few 

Too funny - when I saw the subject of this post, before reading the rest I thought the exact same thing about using some cheap motorized fans as a starting point.  Maybe paint the bases something other than their native neon green - perhaps a nice aluminum or silver?

IT consultant by day, 3rd generation Lionel guy (raising a 3YO 4th generation Lionel Lil' Man) by night in the suburbs of the greatest city in the world - Chicago. Home of the ever-changing Illinois Concretus Ry.

  • Member since
    November 2015
  • 3,584 posts
Posted by Sturgeon-Phish on Tuesday, March 22, 2016 7:02 AM

Neat idea

Jim

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