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kbrum2
Electrical
- Apr 23, 2001
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What kind of information can be gleaned from a generator spec sheet to determine performance of one machine over another? I have two 3-phase 4-pole 1800rpm 60hz diesel-engine driven salient-pole synchronous generators with the following data;
Gen 1 Gen 2
kW Rating 100 80
kVA Rating 125 100
Voltage (PH-N) 277 139
Power Factor 0.8 lagging 0.8 lagging
X''d 0.13 pu 0.118 pu
X'd 0.21 pu 0.397 pu
Xd 2.73 pu 3.694 pu
Xo 0.03 pu 0.010 pu
X2 0.31 pu 0.125 pu
T'd 75 ms 120 ms
Short Circuit Ratio 0.46 0.304
The application is for a non-linear load and the engine is only capable of producing 80kw out of the generator end. I don't want to needlessly upsize the generator and I do not know what the actual load will be; assume 60kw with 60% non-linear load. The manufacturer of generator #1 has a history of poor quality (IMHO) and I was hoping the smaller generator, #2, would demonstrate comparable performance. Generator #2 is capable of being reconnected for 277/480 volts, to match the rating of generator #1.
(As a tangent, if synchronous reactance is present during stead-state loads, how can it exceed 1.0 pu and not limit steady-state full-load current?)
I appreciate any and all respones.
Thanks
Gen 1 Gen 2
kW Rating 100 80
kVA Rating 125 100
Voltage (PH-N) 277 139
Power Factor 0.8 lagging 0.8 lagging
X''d 0.13 pu 0.118 pu
X'd 0.21 pu 0.397 pu
Xd 2.73 pu 3.694 pu
Xo 0.03 pu 0.010 pu
X2 0.31 pu 0.125 pu
T'd 75 ms 120 ms
Short Circuit Ratio 0.46 0.304
The application is for a non-linear load and the engine is only capable of producing 80kw out of the generator end. I don't want to needlessly upsize the generator and I do not know what the actual load will be; assume 60kw with 60% non-linear load. The manufacturer of generator #1 has a history of poor quality (IMHO) and I was hoping the smaller generator, #2, would demonstrate comparable performance. Generator #2 is capable of being reconnected for 277/480 volts, to match the rating of generator #1.
(As a tangent, if synchronous reactance is present during stead-state loads, how can it exceed 1.0 pu and not limit steady-state full-load current?)
I appreciate any and all respones.
Thanks