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January 24, 2013

New Large-scale Offshore Wind Power Generation System

MHI's NewTurbine Nascelle: Photo credit MHI

MHI's NewTurbine Nascelle: Photo credit MHI

MHI begins tests at Yokohama Dockyard & Machinery Works on an hydraulic drive train
, instead of a gear-driven system.

The test operation is a part of the project launched by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI)  in September last year to develop a hydraulic drive train system for offshore wind turbines, which is supported by the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO).

The event marks a world's first operation of a large-scale hydraulic drive train type wind power generation system applying MHI's Digital Displacement Transmission technology. Leveraging the test results, MHI will accelerate its development of an offshore wind power generation system in the 7-megawatt (MW) class, with installation and operation slated to begin at Hunterston, in the UK, within the current year. A mass-produced commercial model will be targeted for market launch in 2015.

The system recently inaugurated in Yokohama is based on an existing 'MWT100' gear-driven wind power generation system that was retrofitted with the new hydraulic drive train. The retrofitting involved replacement of the step-up gear – which functioned as the power transmission system to increase the rotation speed of the rotor (10 rotations per minute: rpm) to the rotation speed of the generator (1,000 rpm) – by the Digital Displacement Transmission hydraulic drive train. 


MHI developed the new hydraulic drive train, with support from NEDO, based on the superior digitally controlled hydraulic technologies of Artemis Intelligent Power, Ltd. of the UK, a venture company acquired by MHI in 2010. The new system offers numerous advantages over earlier systems. Adoption of the hydraulic drive train, for example, realizes outstanding efficiency and reliability through elimination of the conventional step-up gear and inverter, components that have been an issue in the quest for large-scale wind power generation systems. Also, the new configuration offers superlative cost performance as a result of its incorporation of widely adopted hydraulic equipment and materials and relatively inexpensive alternators.

Mitsubishi Heavy IndustriesUnited Kingdomhydraulic equipment
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