Oh and your reply was to use stone? Stone fans? lol

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I don't believe metal is actually too expensive but if you believe it is then what would you suggest to save cost?

Why would you laugh at me for suggesting the logical response to the ridiculous suggestion that we need to use the cheapest possible material, but not laugh at the ridiculous suggestion itself?

You seem to be straight up joining in with my gangstalkers now

Stone wouldn't work, even I know that. So it's a joke. Kinda funny, but not a helpful reply to further conversation, as far as I could tell.

Stone would work, I don't understand what is making you keep ignoring logic

Oh? You trunk building fan parts out of stone is cheaper and as effective? I just can't imagine that. Feel free to elaborate

Probably not as effective since it would miss lower wind speeds

It might resist vibration as an upside but that upside should be cancelled out by its fragility and the extra load it inherently puts on its bearings

But cheaper than metal refinery? Yes

You focusing on the blades? Original post just covered overall materials, hence I imagined a fan entirely of stone as your reply to be a joke.

Stone blades? Maybe, but probably not. Can't think of any easy way to shape stone into uniform blades, let alone ones that have all the helpful properties (flex, etc) needed.

Ah, thanks for clarifying. All stone would indeed be a joke. I had been arguing with the guy about fan blades for a while, starting with him saying all wind turbines must have blades made of fiberglass or they won't work. I said the fanblades should be made of metal on small ones.

I figured there's no way he's saying a dynamo costs more energy to produce than it can ever generate, and there's no way he's saying adding a mount makes it cost more to produce than it can ever generate, so he must be saying metal fanblades have the same cost-to-produce issue as fiberglass.

Stone isn't that hard to shape uniformly, but it won't have all the helpful properties you want, and it will probably need the fan assembly/bearings replaced more often, but if metal fanblades are really too expensive to produce then it still would solve that problem which is just an extreme example to prove bare material cost can't be the problem

Yeah, hard to imagine a cheap little windmill with metal blades (like I'm sure I've seen) costs more than its lifetime energy output would cost. Guessing more to do with the large ones, wasn't sure on that. He did seem to think it applied to even the small battery charging one you mentioned... no idea. In that scenario it's not about cost anyway, or if it is, the right cost to compare to is building power lines to the remote location (you can't say it's the same fixed cost as in a modern home when there's no availability at all)

It also seems to me

like people in developed areas with a power grid would be comparing the cost to a generator+fuel for backup purposes

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Are you imagining the stone just spins up too fast and shatters? Or the wind can't move it at all? I don't get it dude