The article is about the court cases. The discussion, until you showed up, was why the court cases. And that is a military objection, not civilian. So I say it again, you are confused
Maybe read more slowly to comprehend what I wrote so I don't have to keep repeating myself:
I'm not confused, or at least I wasn't. I wasn't referring directly to any court cases. I was referring specifically to what you wrote where you brought up both civilian and military RADAR.
OK. So, first, the article _is_ about the court cases (and the details around them). As I said, I was not referring directly to them. As I said in the sentence you _didn't_ quote, I was referring to what you wrote right before I entered the conversation:
My gut reaction is spite but I also know that the turbine blades do mess with radar returns. You don't have to believe me, or the administration. A simple google search for "turbine blade radar" will give you a whole bunch of interesting things to read. Mitigating their interference has apparently become something of a specialty field.
Followed by two more paragraphs about the supposed military dangers of these wind farms. You yourself are the one who made the topic the technical reality of whether or not these wind turbines are a real problem for military imaging of the coast and general alarmism. I addressed the realities of the turbines and the alarmism.
I will reiterate. I was not the one who brought up civilian RADAR, _you were_. So I covered both civilian and military RADAR in a discussion that was meant to highlight the basic realities of RADAR that apply to both the civilian RADAR systems and the military ones. The discussion of, for example, the Nantucket airport RADAR was mostly to illustrate that, even though it's closer, it still doesn't have any practical issues. The military installations located where all or most of the turbines are not visible over the horizon in line of sight have even less of an issue being further away.
We watch the coastlines with aircraft now, much of it unmanned. Even the Coast Guard has their own drones. And their look down radar is doppler which is particularly affected. What were you saying about line of sight? So once again I'm ignoring the following wall of text because it's irrelevant.
What!? Jebus. This gets dumber and dumber. Aircraft can fly East of the wind farm to cover that area. Your original argument was that the land-based RADAR couldn't see past the wind farm and one of the things I pointed out is that those areas could be covered by military ships with their own RADAR and satellites. So, now all of a sudden you're mentioning yet another system that can operate outside the area that the turbines could possibly be a problem (and also look down from the sky like satellites) and that's your argument? Also, the profile of the wind turbines from above is relatively tiny.
Because you don't know what you are talking about. If you want your over the horizon radar to pickup where your line of sight radar ends then you must place it far inland, about 500 miles or so. Somehow you missed that, or much more likely, didn't know about it.
You have severe reading comprehension issues, don't you? If I write a lot and go into detail it's TLDR. If I keep it short, you fill in imaginary detail of your own. The point was that the only positioning for OTH RADAR where the wind Turbines would be a problem would be if you positioned it where it was looking at the wind turbines. Basically, all you're doing above with "If you want your over the horizon radar to pickup where your line of sight radar ends..." is paraphrasing what I said. No practical configuration of that RADAR would result in it being interfered with by the turbines.
You are amusing ... and you missed the point. The military has detection methods that are not publicly disclosed. Try to find a _real_ picture of the RQ-180 drone.
I didn't miss the point. I stated it clearly and you have just once again provided more evidence that: "In other words, you have no idea what you're talking about WRT military RADAR." You're basically pontificating that, because we don't know what we don't know, that somehow it means that there must be some special threat from wind Turbines to completely unknown imaging systems that might as well be the Force, from Star Wars. So there's some amazing, super high tech, sci fi technology they have but its kryptonite is: wind turbines. Not boats, not birds, not weather, not active countermeasures. Wind Turbines. Right. Sure.
I never said I did, in fact I've put up several smaller ones in rural areas, mostly to pump water for cattle. I've lived around them for much of my life. It's the Department of War
The Department of what? Sorry, I thought you were from the US and talking about the US Military. Must have been some confusion.
And they aren't going to go into details as to why even if it's true because it gives away our capabilities.
They aren't going into detail because of the reason you gave in your very first post. They're just lying. There is no significant issue. There never was, and there will not be once the project is finished. It is not hard to connect the dots. This is happening because the US has a President who says things like:
"If you have a windmill anywhere near your house, congratulations, your house just went down 75 percent in value. And they say the noise causes cancer."
Of course, while that may sound like completely insane ranting, actually he understands wind power
even though
Basically, the man declared that he would not allow "windmills" to be built and this is a pretext to try give some credibility to that goal in court. We don't have to guess about this. The man regularly muses in public about how he will make up fake emergencies to justify his actions.
A 'tiny' part in the case of Virginia project is a 'mere' 112k acres. I'm looking at the lease on a map now, it's huge. 85,000 football fields.
I am not sure why you have to measure it in acres _and_ football fields. Can we just settle on it being 1600 Libraries of Congress? Or, we could put it in terms on how long the sides would be if it were a square. That would be about 13.2 miles. I mean, sizable sure, but not that big compared to the length of the coastline. Also, um, you don't think the entire space is taken up by wind turbines do you? It's 176 turbines, apparently. So, that would be about a square mile each.
I could design and build that system and it would likely work...under optimal conditions...for one turbine. The Virginia one alone is 176, now add seas, weather, etc.
I could design and build that system and it would likely work for all the turbines. Because it would just have to work for one instance of a turbine and then you could apply the method for every instance. Also, "seas, weather, etc." Why do you need to add them. They're already there. RADAR already has to deal with adverse conditions.
I'm not the one making the complaint, I'm just trying to figure out what it is.
Once again, there isn't actually a legitimate complaint. They just made it up as a pretext.
Boats don't cause clutter problems with doppler radar, 728 foot turbine blades do.
Boats can and do create significant clutter problems for RADAR. So, aside from the fact that your claim is not true, boats also occlude RADAR.
I think you should put in applications at the manufacturers for military grade radar because you are obviously smarter than them. I'd suggest starting with Raytheon
As usual, you just ignore what I am actually writing. I am pretty sure of one of those engineers read this conversation, they would come to the same conclusion that I have: Offshore wind turbines are just run of the mill obstacles like many other things found at sea and can be dealt with by an assortment of methods.
The Navy calls them generators and as we are referring to sonar that's the term I used. But you are correct in calling them alternators, even on a sub. But you are also very wrong about the noise they create. It's extremely difficult to keep it shielded so that it won't transmit through the hull. That includes transformers and switching gear.
It's so confusing trying to follow your thinking. Why are you going on about generators/alternators in subs? The point was that what you would find in the nacelle of a wind turbine is considerably quieter. Not to mention that they are 500 feet in the air, not submerged in water. They're not noisy in the water, and they won't get confused with, or overwhelm the noise of subs.
I can well understand why they ignored what you wrote because I'm doing it too while being a fan of renewables. Triggered because somebody disagreed with you. That sounds like you have adopted a religion.
Reading comprehension issues again I see. It is not about people disagreeing with me. It's about having a concealed agenda and pretending to be discussing something in good faith when it's just a plan to deceive. MacMann keeps posting links to: Renewable Energy: Without the Hot Air by Sir David MacKay. It purports to be a logical, data driven approach to considering renewable power. However, if you examine it, it's really just a manipulative exercise designed from the start to drive the conclusion that nuclear power is the only answer. At the end of his life, MacKay stopped pretending to be serious about honestly evaluating renewables and came out as a full on nuclear zealot. That's the sort of thing I am talking about.
As for ignoring what I write, being functionally illiterate isn't something to be proud of. Neither is being dishonest in debate. It's actually pretty pathetic to admit to not actually reading what the other person has to say and just waiting for the next opportunity to hammer your own point while ignoring counterarguments. Seriously, pride in the fact that one thinks that just getting their own two bits in is proper debate?
We know that turbines cause "clutter" with doppler radar.
We know that lots of things cause clutter with Doppler RADAR (additionally, I know that includes boats, although apparently you do not.
We know the Biden adminstration thought that it was less of a security concern than not having windmills out there providing electricity.
Which is it? Is it Presidential administrations , or is it an actual military assessment? Do you think that the Biden administration would have somehow allowed it if there really was some big security threat?
The Trump administration is claiming otherwise. That's what we know, that's all we know.
That is hardly all we know. We also know how insanely dead set against wind power Trump is and how much that he lies. We also know that he will have others in his administration lie for him. Sure, you can always speculate that there's some urgent military reason for his that either only just appeared this year, or that was suppressed under Biden but I think you need to learn how to assign probabilities to things based on the evidence. I am not a big fan of Ockham's Razor, but this isn't really it anyway. There's nothing simple about the craziness of Trump's anti-renewable obsession, after all. This is about assembling the evidence and he possible explanations and weighing them against each other.