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Telecom Tower Wind Estimator

Annual energy estimate for a 3 kW wind turbine via Weibull statistics — honest small-wind math.

Off-grid telecom sites add 1–3 kW turbines to solar-battery systems to cut diesel runtime in monsoon and night winds. Estimate the wind contribution honestly before re-engineering the site's energy balance.

1 MWh
Annual energy production
5.1%
Capacity factor
448 MWh
Per MW installed

AEP integrates a standard cubic power curve (cut-in 3, rated 12, cut-out 25 m/s) over the Weibull wind distribution fitted to your mean speed and shape factor. Screening accuracy ±10% — bankable studies need the OEM curve and on-site met data.

Sources: Weibull wind statistics; IEC 61400-12 AEP methodology; Typical hub-height resource — Telecom site

Engineering estimate from published standards and typical equipment data. Site conditions, equipment datasheets and measured data govern the real result — confirm with a qualified engineer.

Use the free Telecom Tower Wind Estimator online — Annual energy estimate for a 3 kW wind turbine via Weibull statistics — honest small-wind math. Runs instantly in your browser: no signup, no upload, mobile-friendly.

About Telecom Tower Wind Estimator

Off-grid telecom sites add 1–3 kW turbines to solar-battery systems to cut diesel runtime in monsoon and night winds. Estimate the wind contribution honestly before re-engineering the site's energy balance.

How to use Telecom Tower Wind Estimator

  1. 1Enter the turbine rating and your site's mean wind speed at hub height.
  2. 2Adjust the Weibull shape factor for your wind regime.
  3. 3Read AEP, capacity factor and energy per MW installed.

Why use Telecom Tower Wind Estimator?

  • Weibull statistics — how wind is actually distributed, not just averaged
  • Numerical integration over a standard power curve, transparent assumptions
  • Regional wind-speed and shape-factor presets
  • AEP, CF and per-MW yield for instant comparisons

Frequently asked questions

How is annual energy production estimated from mean wind speed?+

Mean speed alone underestimates badly — energy lives in the distribution's gusty tail. The Weibull fit (mean + shape factor k) reconstructs the full speed histogram, and integrating the power curve over it gives AEP within ±10% of professional screening tools.

What is the Weibull shape factor k?+

It describes wind steadiness: k≈1.6–1.9 means gusty/variable (some temperate sites), k≈2 the common default, k≈2.5–3+ remarkably steady trade winds (Brazil's northeast, parts of Tamil Nadu). Same mean speed, different k, can move AEP 10–15%.

What mean wind speed makes a site viable?+

Rough gates at hub height: below 5.5 m/s rarely pencils for grid-scale; 6.5–7.5 m/s is solid; above 8 m/s excellent. Small wind needs the same speeds at far lower hub heights — which is why most residential sites fail (see the small-wind tools for honest math).

Why does the Telecom Tower Wind Estimator differ from my consultant's number?+

Screening vs engineering: this integrates a standardized power curve over fitted statistics; bankable studies use the OEM's exact curve, on-site met-mast data, wake and loss models. Expect ±10% agreement — close enough to rank sites and sanity-check claims, not to finance them.

Embed Telecom Tower Wind Estimator on your website

Want Telecom Tower Wind Estimatoron your own site? Paste this snippet into any HTML page — it's free, with no API key or sign-up. The tool loads in an iframe and keeps working exactly as it does here.

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