A lot of houses in
close proximity to wind farms are too
close to the throw zone when these things fly
to pieces; as they have found in Scotland and some
other countries the blades have travelled over 1.6 km striking houses, schools, highways and trucks and fly
to pieces, as they will, in the coming years, as the fraudulent claims
about the metal fatigue and life time operation start
to surface.
These stem from a diversity of site - specific conditions, including, but not limited
to: local vegetation; presence of building structures and contributions made by such structures involving energy use, heating and air conditioning, etc; exposure
to winds, the wind velocities determined by climatic factors and also whether certain wind directions are more favored than
others by terrain or the presence or absence thereof
to bodies of water;
proximity to grass, asphalt, concrete or
other material surfaces; the physical conditions of the CRS itself which include: the exact location of the temperature sensors within it, the degree of unimpeded flow of external air through the CRS, the character of the paint used; the exact height of the instrument above the external surface (noting that when the ground is covered by 3 feet of snow, the temperature instrument is
about 60 %
closer to, or less than 2 feet, above an excellent radiating surface, much
closer than it would be under snow - free conditions).