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The WeatherSolve Team
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Looking for reliability, durability and effectiveness?
At WeatherSolve we take pride in our ability to provide quality systems that do what they are supposed to do no matter what weather.
Recent structures have included:
Double thickness fence to control dust on a woodchip pile
Coal pile solutions on a far north stockpile
Dust containment screen at a crushed rock storage facility
Dust control barrier incorporated with a rock barrier alongside an erosion-prone highway
Contact Information
For all inquiries, please contact us at :
or telephone
1 800 749 2201
or (604) 351 1175
fax (604) 607 7781
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WeatherSolve's Wind Shelter Systems:
Wind causes erosion, transports dust, spray, and other pollution. Wind also restricts plant growth, damages plants and buildings, and reduces efficiency of heating systems.
A windbreak slows the wind in one place by deflecting it to another. The best windbreaks produce a zone behind the windbreak which will have wind of about a quarter of the speed. For a 50ft high windbreak this zone will extend about 250ft downwind. From 250ft to 500ft the windspeed will increase up to about half that of the incoming wind. Beyond that windspeeds increase quickly.
[NOTE: the terms windbreak, windfence, wind shelter, shelter fence, and wind screen are used interchangeably here. Purists might see a windbreak as a row (or several rows close together) of trees, yet a fabric or artificial shelter achieves the same thing, so it is easiest to use windbreak as the general term].
The wind is like a river, with the earth equivalent to the bottom of the river. Water flows and tumbles over the river bottom. The faster the flow, the more tumbling (turbulence).
If we were to throw a large rock into the river, we would create a sheltered spot immediately behind the rock. This is a windbreak in its most basic form. The problem is that just past the rock, the water that had been deflected over and around the rock would come crashing down and in.

WINDBREAKS
Windbreaks control the amount of "crashing down and in" by letting a little wind flow through. The wind flowing through holds the faster (deflected) wind away for a few hundred feet. This lets the winds merge together again more gently with less turbulence.
The effects are shown in the drawing which shows a side view of a well-designed windbreak and the windspeeds around it.
Click on the image for a full-screen version in a new window.
For more shelter effectiveness information,
see the Technical page or the
Growth page for temperature and crop growth effects
Wind-protection fences, Breathable cladding systems Hail and wind canopies.
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