Travel 300 feet into the sky with the photographer philip_nyc, whose images capture wind-turbine technicians at work.
The Pinnacle wind-power plant extends for roughly four miles in the northeastern corner of West Virginia. Twenty-three turbines dot the spine of the Appalachians, irregularly spaced along the mountain ridges. The towers, supplied by Siemens Gamesa, rise three hundred feet, looking like giant pinwheels amid a rolling landscape of small towns and windy roads. The rotating blades can be seen from Maryland and Pennsylvania.
Three hundred feet above the ground, two Pinnacle workers, Tyler Simmons and Isaiah Smith , inspect the inside of a wind turbine. Cleanliness is essential for such a delicate apparatus. Each turbine blade spins up to sixteen times a minute. Pinnacle turbines dot the skyline in Keyser, West Virginia, where, according to Andrew Cosner, a twenty-one-year-old technician, some residents remain hostile to the new wind farm: “They say it ruins the landscape and it’s ugly.”Kisamore notes that, from the top of a tower, you can “see how small the cars are.”
Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Aeromine’s cutting edge motionless wind turbine needs no bladeAeromine's evolutionary motionless wind turbine is more efficient than conventional turbines.
Read more »
Runners bundle up for the Philadelphia MarathonRunners in the Philadelphia Marathon bundle up for Sunday's full marathon.
Read more »
Philly marathon runners toughed out cold, windy conditionsWith winds gusting at times to nearly 30 mph, making temps feel like the low-20s, runners and their supporters were gloved and layered up but not short on enthusiasm for the annual endurance event.
Read more »
Runners battle cold, wind during Philadelphia MarathonTens of thousands of athletes competed in the Philadelphia marathon Sunday, battling both frigid temperatures and high winds on their way to the finish line.
Read more »