METHOD OF CONDITION MONITORING ONE OR MORE WIND TURBINES AND PARTS THEREOF AND PERFORMING INSTANT ALARM WHEN NEEDED
20190072082 ยท 2019-03-07
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01P5/26
PHYSICS
F03D17/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2220/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03D7/0224
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E10/72
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F05B2260/80
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2270/8041
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05B2220/706
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03D7/0204
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G01M11/081
PHYSICS
F03D7/042
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F03D17/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03D7/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F03D7/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
Disclosed is a method of condition monitoring a WTG (Wind Turbine Generator) comprising acts of collecting and storage of at least the following data sets together with their time stamps. Collection of generator power production measurements. Collection of mechanical status measurements. Collection of generator torque measurements. Collection of nacelle direction measurements. Collection of meteorological conditions measurements. The method compromises a further act of synchronizing the data sets. The invention also relates to a system for condition monitoring a WTG. The invention further relates to a system for visually inspecting a WTG.
Claims
1. A method of condition monitoring a wind turbine generator comprising acts of: collecting at least the following data sets with time stamps: A) generator power production measurements; B) mechanical status measurements; C) nacelle direction measurements; D) meteorological conditions measurement including at least wind condition measurements; E) and torque measurement synchronizing and Processing the data sets to provide at least i) Rotor/blade status information ii) Generator power production information iii) Tower status information classifying the information i), ii) and iii) in at least the following states of operation: Normal state of operation or Non-normal state of operation, characterized in, that the said act of synchronization is performed in at least one synchronization system for synchronizing collected and time stamped data.
2. The method of condition monitoring according to claim 1, wherein the data sets A), B), C) and D) are collected, time stamped, stored and synchronized.
3. The method of conditioning monitoring according to claim 1 wherein the act of classifying at least one automatic self-calibrating processing of the parameters for the classification of the state of operation being adjusted to the individual wind turbine.
4. The method of condition monitoring according to claim 1, wherein yaw misalignment is classified as a normal state of operation.
5. The method of condition monitoring according to claim 1, wherein an act of processing data to provide Yaw misalignment and/or Tower status information is via acts of: Processing data to provide i) Rotor/blade status information, ii) generator power production information from A) power production measurements B) mechanical status measurements or load.
6. The method of condition monitoring according to claim 1, wherein the act of processing data to provide yaw misalignment information and/or tower status information and/or information about wind gusts approaching the wind turbine is via acts of: collecting C) nacelle direction measurements and/or D) meteorological conditions measurements from a permanently or temporally installed high precision system a permanently installed lower precision system corrected/calibrated to the high precision system.
7. The method of condition monitoring according to claim 1, wherein the acts of Collecting involves acts of collecting A) time stamped generator power production measurements that are synchronized with B) time stamped sensory input including Hub sensory input Rotor blade sensory input Main Shaft sensory input Nacelle sensory input C) that are synchronized with time stamped nacelle/drive train direction measurements; E) that are synchronized with time stamped torque sensory input and where the act of processing involves assessing one of, more of or all of: Rotor imbalance Individual blade imbalance Yaw alignment Icing on blades Contamination of blade Individual blade damage Pitch bearing damage Electrical or hydraulic Pitch error Unbalanced mass of individual blades Improved (increased or reduced) generator power production from yawing Improved (increased or reduced) generator power production from pitching blades Actual Yawed wind inflow angle Actual turbulence Actual Sloped wind inflow angle Actual horizontal wind shear Abnormal movements in tower Generator power production classification Wind gust approaching the rotor
8. A wind turbine generator condition monitoring system comprising: data set collection means for collecting data sets with time stamps from A) means for measuring generator power production output; B) means for measuring mechanical status; C) means for measuring nacelle direction; D) means for measuring meteorological conditions; E) means for measuring torque conditions for the generator; at least one processor configured to process the collected data sets and functionally to generate an output of one or more of: i) Rotor/blade status information; ii) Generator power production information; iii) Tower status information; iv) Wind gust approaching the rotor information; and generate at least one output of classified information Normal state of operation or Non-normal state of operation, characterized by comprising at least one synchronization system for synchronizing collected and time stamped data.
9. A wind turbine generator condition monitoring system according to claim 8, further comprising at least one synchronization system for synchronizing collected and time stamped data and optionally to provide information for improved (increased or reduced) generator power production from yawing to be used for automatic control of yawing and other purposes; optionally to provide information for improved (increased or reduced) generator power production from pitching blades to be used for automatic control of blade pitching and other purposes; and optional optionally provide information for improved load reduction control by pitching blades to avoid loads from high gusts approaching the wind turbine.
10. A wind turbine generator condition monitoring system according to claim 8, further comprising at least one automatic self-calibrating processing of the parameters for the classification of the state of operation being adjusted to the individual wind turbine.
11. A method of operating a wind turbine generator with a wind turbine generator controller based on conditioning monitoring according to claim 1, wherein the method of operation involves acts of: Controlling the wind turbine generator by feeding the processed at least: i) Rotor/blade status information ii) Generator power production information iii) Tower status information to the wind turbine generator controller conditionally based on at least the classified states of operation: Normal state of operation Non-normal state of operation.
12. The method of operating a wind turbine generator according to claim 11, wherein the states of operation of: Normal state of operation allows operation where no corrective action signals are applied to the wind turbine generator controller or where corrective action signals are applied to the wind turbine generator controller; Non-normal state of operation raises a flag/an alarm requiring the act of manual attendance for continued operation of the wind turbine generator.
13. The method of operating a wind turbine generator according to claim 11, wherein the state of operation of: Normal state of operation involves operating the WTG with yaw misalignment.
14. The method of operating a wind turbine generator according to claim 11, wherein the state of operation of: Non-normal state of operation requires the act of automatic stop of continued operation of the wind turbine generator and an act of inspecting the wind turbine generator before normal state of operation is resumed.
15. The method of operating a wind turbine generator according to claim 11, wherein the state of operation of: Non-normal state of operation requires visually inspecting the wind turbine generator by acts of: pointing a visual inspection system with a field of view about a line of sight of a plane where a the rotor blade, the rotor system and the tower during still stand, start up and during operation will be present; capturing multiple images of the field of view with at least multiple images with at least part of the rotor blade, the rotor system and the tower in the image; selecting at least one reference image amongst the captured images; comparing at least one other captured image with the reference image.
16. The method of operating a wind turbine generator according to claim 11, wherein the method of operation involves acts of controlling the wind turbine generator by feeding the processed at least information for improved (increased or reduced) generator power production from yawing to the wind turbine generator controller for controlling automatically alignment (yawing) of the wind turbine generator nacelle to positioning the rotor in the optimal wind direction based on improvement of generator power production during yawing according to claim 7 and claim 8. The principal is, that the wind turbine generator yaw controller in sequence forces yawing in different directions to search for optimum of generator power production and there by optimal yaw alignment.
17. The method of operating a wind turbine generator according to claim 11, wherein the method of operation involves acts of controlling the wind turbine generator by feeding the processed information for improved (increased or reduced) generator power production from pitching blades to the wind turbine generator controller for controlling wind turbine generator blade pitch automatically to positioning the blade in an optimal angle based on improvement of generator power production during blade pitching.
18. The method of operating a wind turbine generator according to claim 11, wherein the method of operation involves acts of controlling the wind turbine generator by feeding the processed information about gusts approaching the wind turbine by controlling WTG blade to pitch automatically to positioning the blade in an optimal angle based on improved load control reducing loads from peak wind gusts.
19. The method of condition monitoring according to claim 1 comprising a further act of visually inspecting a wind turbine generator comprising the acts of: pointing a visual inspection system with a field of view about a line of sight of a plane where a the rotor blade, the rotor system and the tower during still stand, start up and during operation will be present; capturing multiple images of the field of view with at least multiple images with at least part of the rotor blade, the rotor system and the tower in the image; selecting at least one reference image amongst the captured images; comparing at least one other captured image with the reference image.
20. The method of condition monitoring according to claim 19, where the visual inspection is carried out by means of one or more line scan cameras.
21. The method of condition monitoring according to claim 19, where the visual inspection is carried out by means of one or more line scan cameras and one or more area scan cameras.
22. The method of condition monitoring according to claim 21 where one or more line scan camera is used as a trigger unit to activate one or more area scan camera.
23. The method of condition monitoring according to claim 20, where phase lock loop technology is used for triggering and activation of either one or more line scan cameras and/or one or more area scan camera based on software or methods to synchronize the computer to the real rotor.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
[0277] The invention is described in more detail in the following reference being made to the accompanying drawing, in which:
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[0295] Wake effect behind the rotor,
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
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[0312] Area scan and line scan view are illustrated in
[0313]
[0314] Line scan representation of motion: A running rotor is shown. The motion is captured as one long image (a full rotor turn). As far as known, there don't exist pictures of a turbine rotor captured with a line scan camera. The image in
[0315] The specialty in the line scan captured picture is, that together with the blade tip we also get a clear picture of the bladeswhere the blade tip, the leading edge and the trailing edge, respectively, in
[0316] Both thermographic, areas scan and line scan cameras can be used for blade inspection of all items on the rotor during rotation and full production.
[0317] Blade edge check: An example is damages after big stones hit the blade. (Stones can be lifted by wind/tornado)
[0318] Blade surface check: Many surface damages can be checked as open cracks, fiber damages and holes. These kinds of damages can be visualised directly or as shadows created by floodlight or laser light.
[0319] Camera view angle and camera position: The camera(s) can be placed in all positions in relation to capture images for analysis. It can be situated from below, the front side, rear side, edge sides and all around by using drones (Helicopters).
[0320] Tower stability analysis: Based on the images taken, the tower frequency, movement, tilt and twist during still stand, start up and during production can be analyzed.
[0321] Park analysis: The camera rig will be equipped with an electronic compass so the absolute rotor direction can be captured. Together with timestamp, wind speed measurements and analysis results statistical materials can be saved in a hard disk for every single blade in the park. Afterwards it will be possible to extract, sort and compare data.
[0322] In
[0323] In
[0324] In
[0325] The Condition monitoring box 26 is shown located inside the nacelle 4. Further located inside the nacelle 4 is situated the accelerometers/sensors 28 located on the main shaft and in a position of the centre of the tower, and the torque measurement sensor 29, and the generator power production measurement sensor(s) 30 are situated on the generator power production cables from the generator.
[0326] On the rotor 10 the accelerometers/sensors 28 are located in the hub and on the individual blades.
[0327] On top of the nacelle 4, the antennas 38 for the GPS position, tilt and direction system, the antenna 46 for the satellite communication system, the existing meteorological sensors/instruments 24 and potentially also a LiDAR 32 is situated.
[0328] In
[0329] The new and more precise input measurements from the Condition monitoring box 26 will be calculated by making use of stored table values, technical methods and/or algorithms in the signal correction box 26 before the output is send to the WTG controller 22 this considering: [0330] A. Time stamped generator power production measurements provided by the generator output measurement instruments 30, synchronized with [0331] B. Time stamped and synchronized input from sensors 28 installed in the hub 6, on rotor blades 2, on main shaft 16 and in the nacelle 4 in the centre of the tower 8 providing position-dependent measurements of movements, accelerations, angles of rotation of the rotor, the individual rotor blades and the tower in x, y and z axes, synchronized with [0332] C. Time stamped nacelle 360? actual wind direction measured by the permanently installed compass 11 (or the like), synchronized with [0333] D. Time stamped wind measurements from existing measurement instruments and/or potentially also from temporarily installed measurement instruments [0334] E. Time stamped measurement from torque sensor 29,
[0335] The existing measurement instrument 24 will still be connected directly to the WTG controller 22, this assuring that any safety system of the WTG is intact.
[0336]
[0337] On the rotor 10 the accelerometers/sensors 28 are located in the hub 6 and on the individual blades 2.
[0338] On top of the nacelle 4 is situated, the antenna 46 for the satellite communication system 44, the existing meteorological sensors/instruments 24, potentially also a LiDAR 32 and the antennas 38 for the GPS position, tilt and direction system 36. Said GPS antennas 38 are calibrated to the longitudinal axis defining the direction of the nacelle 4.
[0339] Inside the nacelle 4 is situated the condition monitoring box 26, the GPS position tilt and direction compass system 36, the satellite based communication system 44, the accelerometers/sensors 28 are located on the main shaft and in a position on top of the centre of the tower, and torque measurement sensor 29 and the generator power production measurement sensor(s) 30 are situated on the generator power production cables.
[0340] The condition monitoring box 26 receive signals from the meteorological sensors 24, potentially also from the LiDAR 32, from a precision GPS position tilt and direction compass system 36 (or the like), from the satellite based communication system 44, from the accelerometers/sensors 28, from the torque measurement sensor 29 and from the generator power production measurement sensor(s) 30.
[0341] Furthermore, the condition monitoring box 26 can receive signals from optional sensors 48 as indicated with a dotted interaction arrow 40.
[0342] The condition monitoring box 26 is receiving commands and providing instant alarm signals via satellite and offers data transfer options via GPRS/SMS/Satellite/Internet or other relevant communication system to owner/operator 68, mobile device 70 and local server 72 as indicated with a dotted interaction arrow 42.
[0343] The condition monitoring box 26 can also receive and provide signals and data to the WTG controller 22 as indicated with a dotted interaction arrow 42.
[0344] The WTG controller 22 furthermore may be interconnected with a user SCADAas indicated by a double interaction arrow 42.
[0345] The permanently installed instruments related to the condition monitoring box 26 are manually and automatically calibrated when installed and if needed also in relevant time intervals which ideally will be synchronized with the change out of anemometers and wind vanes 24.
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[0349] 24at least receiving input from one existing measurement instruments located behind the rotor providing at least input about actual meteorological conditions behind the rotor by use of measurements of wind speed and potentially also wind direction measurements.
[0350] 28at least one accelerometer and sensors installed in the hub, on each of the rotor blades, on the main shaft and in the nacelle located in the centre of the tower providing position-dependent measurements of movements, accelerations, angles of rotation of the rotor, the individual rotor blades and the tower in x, y and z axes. All these sensors should be synchronized.
[0351] 29at least one torque measurement sensor measuring torque on the generator 20,
[0352] 30at least one power measurement device providing measurements of instantaneous generator power production values.
[0353] 36at least one permanently installed nacelle/drivetrain direction measurement instrument (compass or the like) for precisely measuring the nacelle/drivetrain direction enabling comparison with the input measurements related to the actual nacelle directionand provide information about when the nacelle yaw system actually are turning the nacelle to be able to evaluate the change in the aerodynamic efficiency of the rotor.
[0354] 32optional input about actual meteorological conditions from nacelle mounted LiDAR, spinner anemometer or other instruments measuring wind speed, turbulence and potentially also wind direction and wind inflow angle etc. in front of the rotor and takes into account said stored input about atmospheric conditions obtained by these sensing means, and
[0355] 48optional input from additional relevant condition monitoring and measurement instruments which can be added to extend the invention to support a Critical Component Condition Monitoring, Fault Detection and Instant Alarm System for other key components in a WTG and parts thereof, and
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[0358] 44at least one reliable communication and time synchronization system interconnected with satellite antenna 46, or any other communication interface that may become relevant in the future, providing and receiving an instant alarm message and other information to/from the owner/operator/24/7 surveillance centers for appropriate action. Additional the time setting provided by the communication channel is used for setting time synchronization in the condition monitoring box software on an adequate frequent basis to synchronize time setting in all signal correction boxes on a wind turbine fleet basis.
[0359] 50at least one power backup with sufficient capacity to safely shut down all software in the condition monitoring box 26 and attached systems in case of sudden loss of permanent power supply.
[0360] 52at least one power supply to the condition monitoring box and attached systems.
[0361] 56at least one terminal interface and one USB interface option.
[0362] 60and at least one communication interface providing option to transfer larger data amountscould be WAN interface 54 or GPRS/3G/4G/5G interface option 58, or any other communication interface that may become relevant in the future to be able to transfer larger data amounts to the owner/operator/24/7 surveillance centers for appropriate action, and
[0363] 62at least one permanent on line connection option from the said condition monitoring box 26 to the WTG controller 22 to interconnect and transfer a regulatory output to the WTG controller 22 and potentially also to receive input from the WTG controller 22.
[0364] In
[0365] In the longer term a server in a local/regional surveillance center 72 or a server in a global and logistic surveillance center 76 will monitor and collect data from all the condition monitoring boxes 26 located in the nacelle 4 in agreed sequence and will be able to remotely transfer back signals, commands, algorithms, updated software etc. to the condition monitoring box 26 installed in nacelle 4 or directly to the WTG controller 22 or directly to the owner and operator 68, 70.
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[0367] This collection of wind condition values may be completed through more days or weeks before the necessary measurements from the most dominating surrounding wind sectors and/or wind speed bins are collected and stored in the condition monitoring box 26.
[0368] Special geographic or local conditions can make it impossible to collect measurements from all wind bins and wind sectors surrounding the WTG 12however in case of missing wind bins and/or wind sector measurements from specific wind sectors such measurements may be substituted by measured or extrapolated wind condition values.
[0369] By the collection of LiDAR generated measurements one may be aware of the general mode of operation of a LiDAR using laser beams to measure reflections from air particles in the atmospheric air in front of the rotor 10.
[0370] This means that under certain conditions e.g. heavy fog or rain the LiDAR will not be able to measure any reflections from air particles in front of the rotor 10.
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[0373] The entire rotor's 10 aerodynamic efficiency for the 360? swept area 80 by the rotor can be quantified by the measured accumulated generator power production in the time period when a specific blade has rotated 360?.
[0374] An aerodynamic efficiency of a specific blade 2 in a specific sector of the area 80 swept by the rotor can be quantified by the measured accumulated generator power production in the time period where this specific blade 2 is located in the specific sector of the swept area 80.
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[0377] In the left hand side of
[0378] It can also clearly be seen from the blocking effect contours 88 in front (to the left) of the rotor 10 that the blocking effect in the horizontal plane 82 (with respect to rotor plane) at hub 6 height in front of the rotor 10 is not symmetrical primarily due to rotor rotation.
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[0380] In the left hand side of
[0381] It can also clearly be seen to the left side from the contours 92 in front of the rotor 10 that the blocking effect in the horizontal plane 82 (with respect to rotor plane) at hub 6 height in front of the rotor 10 is not symmetrical. By comparing
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[0384] It can clearly be seen from
[0385] Based on these findings related to the contours of the blocking zone in front of the rotor 10 (see 88 in
[0390] The present invention therefore provides a highly desirable better and totally new combined technology for condition measuring and monitoring the actual aerodynamic efficiency of the individual blades and the entire rotor in any 360? blade and 360? rotor position at any time during operationto provide correct information to the wind turbine controller for obtaining the best possible generator power production and lowest loads to be within the specifications.
[0391] The invention suggest to use a combined technology to measure the aerodynamic efficiency of the individual blade and the entire rotor in any 360? position [0392] In this way a WTG can also use the entire rotor as a new innovative measuring instrument which the wind turbine industry have been looking for so many years now.
[0393] This new combined technology can support and eventually substitute the existing instruments located behind the rotor.
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[0395] Wind speed bin is the expression for a wind speed interval, typically 0.5-1 m/s. Wind speed data are grouped In each of these wind speed intervals (wind speed bins) and based on this relevant statistic's and calculations can then be made for each wind speed bin. This type of statistics and calculations can for example be power performance measurements and Weibull wind speed distributions like in figure below, where variations in wind speed are expected.
[0396] The reason why wind speed data are grouped in wind speed bins is that statistically variances are expected which is easier to analyze when data are grouped in those wind speed bins.
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[0400] Otherwise in
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[0402] The power curve to the left 112 represents the power curve as expected after the condition monitoring box 26 is interconnected to and new information taken into considerations by the WTG controller 22 according to the present invention. Collection and processing of data from the new instruments can also be done directly in the WTG controller 22.
[0403] Park and fleet analysis: Input and output from the condition monitoring boxes will eventually be stored in a local database and a global database for every single wind turbine in the specific wind farms. Afterwards it will be possible to extract, sort and compare data for an ongoing optimization of the condition monitoring box technical methods and algorithms and for further analysis and statistical materials.
REFERENCE NUMBERS IN THE DRAWING
[0404] 2 Wind turbine rotor blades [0405] 4 Nacelle [0406] 6 Spinner/hub [0407] 8 Tower [0408] 10 Rotor (spinner/hub 6 on which at least one rotor blade 2 is mounted). [0409] 12 Wind Turbine Generator (WTG) (its main components are nacelle 4+tower 8+rotor 10+foundation 14) [0410] 14 Foundation for the tower 8 [0411] 16 Main shaft [0412] 18 Gearbox [0413] 19 High speed shaft connecting gearbox 18 and generator 20 [0414] 20 Generator [0415] 22 WTG Controller (Typically located inside the tower 8 in the bottom) [0416] 24 Wind speed and wind direction measurement instrument located on the nacelle 4 behind the rotor 10 [0417] 26 Condition monitoring box [0418] 28 Accelerometers, sensors installed in the hub, on rotor blades, on main shaft and in the nacelle located in the centre of the tower providing position-dependent measurements of movements, accelerations, angles of rotation of the rotor, the individual rotor blades and the tower in x, y and z axes [0419] 29 Torque measurement measuring torque on the generator [0420] 30 Generator power production measurement [0421] 32 LiDAR (Light Detection And Ranging) with at least one laser beam, a spinner anemometer or any other instrument which can measure wind speed and turbulence and potentially also yaw misalignment and wind inflow angle etc. in front of or on the rotor 10 [0422] 34 Line representing laser beam from LiDAR 32 [0423] 35 Drive train in a WTG 12. Could be a gearless drive train (hub/spinner 6, main rotor shaft 16 and generator 20) or a traditional drive train (hub/spinner 6, main rotor shaft 16, gear box 18, high speed shaft 19 and generator 20) [0424] 36 Nacelle based GPS position tilt and direction compass system or any other instrument or alternative system that reliably can measure the true nacelle/drive train direction [0425] 38 Minimum 2 antennas connected to a GPS position, tilt and direction system. [0426] 40 Dotted interaction arrow [0427] 42 Double interaction arrow [0428] 44 Satellite based communication system [0429] 46 Minimum 1 antenna connected to satellite based communication system [0430] 48 Optional interfaces for additional condition monitoring technologies [0431] 50 Short time power supply back up [0432] 52 Power supply [0433] 54 WAN interface [0434] 56 Terminal interface [0435] 58 GPRS/3G/4G/5G or any other or any other high-throughput data transfer system interface. [0436] 60 USB interface [0437] 62 WTG controller 22 interface [0438] 64 Line illustrate connection in between condition monitoring box 26 and WTG controller 22 [0439] 66 Line and cloud illustrates distribution of instant alarm via satellite and data transfer options from/to condition monitoring box 26 via/GPRS/3G/4G/5G/SMS/high-throughput Satellite system/Internet or any other high-throughput data transfer system. [0440] 68 Instant alarm transferred and received by owner/operator [0441] 70 Instant alarm transferred and received on mobile device [0442] 72 Instant alarm and data transferred and received by local server and stored for further analysis and statistics [0443] 74 Instant alarm and data transferred from local server to global server using high throughput data transfer system. [0444] 76 Instant alarm and data transfer received by global server and stored for further analysis and statistics [0445] 78 Arrow representing surrounding wind sectors [0446] 80 Dotted circle illustrating the swept area by the rotor 10 [0447] 82 Fat dotted line illustrating the horizontal direction (with respect to rotor plane) [0448] 84 Fat dotted line illustrating the tangential direction (with respect to rotor plane) [0449] 86 Wind direction arrow [0450] 88 Blocking effect in front of the rotor 10 Contours of the normalized mean stream wise velocity (u/u.sub.h) in the horizontal plane 82 (with respect to rotor plane) at hub 6 height in the vicinity of the zero-yawed turbine (Wake conference 2015Journal of Physics: Conference Series 625 (2015) 012014 FIG. 5.) [0451] 90 Wake effect behind the rotor 10Contours of the normalized mean stream wise velocity (u/u.sub.h) in the horizontal plane 82 (with respect to rotor plane) at hub 6 height in the vicinity of the zero-yawed turbine (Wake conference 2015 Journal of Physics: Conference Series 625 (2015) 012014 FIG. 5.) [0452] 92 Blocking effect in front of the rotor 10 Contours of the normalized mean stream wise velocity (u/u.sub.h) in the horizontal plane 82 (with respect to rotor plane) at hub 6 height in the vicinity of the turbine operating with 30? yaw misalignment angle (Wake conference 2015Journal of Physics: Conference Series 625 (2015) 012014 FIG. 12.) [0453] 94 Wake effect behind the rotor 10 Contours of the normalized mean stream wise velocity (u/u.sub.h) in the horizontal plane 82 (with respect to rotor plane) at hub 6 height in the vicinity of the turbine operating with 30? yaw misalignment angle (Wake conference 2015Journal of Physics: Conference Series 625 (2015) 012014 FIG. 12.) [0454] 96 Optimal wind inflow angle illustrated by the dotted line [0455] 98 Sloped wind inflow angle illustrated by the arrows [0456] 100 LiDAR 32 with circular scan pattern [0457] 102 LiDAR 32 with 4 beams and linear scan pattern [0458] 104 Nacelle 4/drive train 35 direction (dotted line) [0459] 106 Dotted line representing 0? yaw misalignment [0460] 108 Line representing average yaw misalignment value [0461] 110 Power curve before for 3 MW WTG (measured with nacelle based LiDAR 32) [0462] 112 Power curve after for 3 MW WTG (measured with nacelle based LiDAR 32) [0463] 114 Top position for the blade 2 in the swept area 80 of the rotor 10 [0464] 116 Bottom position for the blade 2 in the swept area 80 of the rotor 10 [0465] 118 Contours of the expected Blocking effect zone in front of the rotor 10 normalized mean stream wise velocity (u/u.sub.h) in the tangential plane 84 (with respect to rotor plane) in the vicinity of the turbine operating with 0? yaw misalignment angle. [0466] 120 Line representing the 7? tilt angle (horizontally) of mounting for the nacelle 4/the drive train 35/the rotor 10 with respect to the tower 8. [0467] 122 Length of the lines showing the expected wind speed relatively in the tangential plane 84 under normal circumstances will be increasing when the height above the terrain increases.