Commercial turbines of the 1980s, such as the Vestas V17, ran 15 m blades and produced 75 kW. 5 MW machines carried 40 m blades. 5 m blade, and public roadmaps show prototypes nudging 120 m.
According to The United States Department of Energy, most modern land-based wind turbines have blades of over 170 feet (52 meters). This means that their total rotor diameter is longer than a football field.
This video shows how enormous wind turbine blades are designed, molded, reinforced, cured, finished, and transported using cutting-edge engineering and precision manufacturing.
Furthermore, the wind turbines for bridges have no blades and parts that can detach and fall, they are compact and powerful, occupy otherwise unused spaces, are not invasive and are not dangerous for the movement of men and vehicles both on the bridge and under the.
A wind turbine's electricity generation varies significantly based on size and wind conditions, but typical modern utility-scale turbines generate between 2 to 3 megawatts (MW), equivalent to 2000-3000 kilowatts, while smaller residential turbines might produce only a few kilowatts.