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African site - mast to mast predictions affected by terrain


PaulH

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I'm looking at a site in Africa, where three 80m-ish masts have been measuring for nearly a year. The wind rose for all is predominantly easterly. The masts lie near the edge of a 2000m plateau which is west of the masts. Two of the masts are roughly the same distance from the "edge", where terrain drops ~500m. They predict themselves and each other well (within 0.1%). One mast lies nearer the edge, on similar altitude to the other two, however it seems to benefit from higher windspeeds as the wind "falls" down the escarpment to the west. To predict this mast from the others leads to a ~15-20% under-prediction, to predict the others from this one leads to a ~15-20% over-prediction.
The masts are measuring at multiple heights and have temp, rel hum and pressure measurements at the base. Is there anything I can do by way of parameter adjustment to improve mast to mast predictions for the "edge" mast to account for the acceleration in windspeed caused by the drop in terrain?
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  • 3 weeks later...
It's difficult to say from your description only, what is going on here. However, I guess from the scale of things that mesoscale effects may be important here, and I doubt whether any parameter changes will help you improve the WAsP predictions. Rather, the change of the wind climate seems to be governed by terrain features that WAsP cannot model adequately - is my guess...


PS. Do you use the same map for all the predictions?
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