Video of the Day: 7.5MW wind turbine construction

Published by

CleanTechnica

If you have any interest in wind turbines, you might enjoy this 3-minute 42-second video showing a huge 7.58 MW Enercon E126 being assembled. The first images are of the enormous circular concrete foundation, which weighs about 2,500 tons, according to text below the video.

Image Credit: Jfz, Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported
Image Credit: Jfz, Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

These initial shots are informative in that they show some human figures on and near it, which provides a sense of scale. You can also see a number of steel structures that look something like an internal frame. The technology used throughout the video is present here too – very long cranes, sometimes it appears with extensions.

Drone shots are used quite a bit in the video and at about 18 seconds there is a very impressive rotating, rising shot. If you want to more closely examine details in the various construction shots, you can expand the video to the largest size and stop it to look within them. This might be worth doing because in some shots there is a lot of equipment.

You can see why drones with cameras were necessary: the wind turbine’s height is about 650 feet with a rotor diameter of 443 feet. Placing the hub at over 400 feet seems particularly precarious, and watching the workers do it with precision is very impressive. Considering that wind turbines need to be located in areas with sufficient winds to turn the blades and generate electricity, it almost doesn’t seem possible that extremely long crane arms could be maneuvered so precisely to put all the turbine pieces in place to create the whole structure, but the workers do it.

At about 3:18 there is another scale shot, where you see humans standing and walking on one blade which is on the ground.

The video’s title says the turbine is the most powerful in the world, but that seems to be untrue.

There is a 10 MW offshore turbine and Vestas has an 8 MW turbine.

The video might have been made before these two larger ones became available though. Nevertheless, the video is fascinating to watch if for no other reason than to see humans pulling off what appears to be nearly impossible.

Source: CleanTechnica. Reproduced with permission.


Share
Published by
Tags: wind energy

Recent Posts

Australian green hydrogen startup signs deal to deliver its first large-scale electrolyser

An Australian startup promising to transform the economics of green hydrogen has celebrated its fifth…

4 July 2026

Zen Energy put into administration just days after regulatory approvals for sale and transfer

One of the leading lights of a new breed of renewable-energy based utilities placed into…

4 July 2026

Solar Sharer free power offer is being undermined by higher network charges and complex tariffs

Some households will use batteries, EV charging and behaviour change to make very good use…

3 July 2026

China battery giant launches major new push for “circularity” amid EV and home storage boom

China battery giant launches two major initiatives aimed at improving the sustainability of battery manufacturing,…

3 July 2026

Community battery rollout is way behind schedule, with only a quarter built on time

A report into the progress of the federal government's Arena-backed community battery rollout has revealed…

3 July 2026

One of Australia’s first solar and battery hybrid projects reaches financial close, confirming big shift in market

One of Australia's first solar and battery hybrid projects reaches financial close, confirming big shift…

3 July 2026