chipless i can see your dealing with rocket scientists here ill break it down for these folks, 1 electric motor to replace the blade on your wind turbine head driven at a 1 to 3 drive ratio to turn the turbine at 5175 rpm, the turbine is connected to voltage controller, voltage controller is then connected to a battery bank, the battery bank is connected to the DC to AC inverter as long as your input voltage and amperage to the battery bank is equal to or greater then your amperage output this will function as stated, so basically we are driving the turbine head with an electric motor instead of a prop, thus maintaining charge on the battery bank the only cost would be the amount to run the electric motor, the power to the inverter is maintained by the battery bank as long as our battery charge amperage is more then then battery draw on the inverter this will sustain. so driving one generator head will produce 83 amps of charge power as long as we stay under 83 amps of battery drain on the inverter this will provide continous 120 volt ac output via the inverter.