Throughout the years I say a hand ful of these, mostly emergency power for phone switching stations. The later ones were LP or natural gas fueled. I believe these gen sets were produced by Katolight Corp. The also used alot of Ford engines.Some old guy in Connecticut was a retired electrical engineer and passed away. This is what he had in his basement for when the power went out. lol It's actually up for sale. Pictures stolen with pride off Facebook. @67Dart273 Del, this looks like something you'd do. lol
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YepHere is another looks like it was running on gas
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2 pole units are for small engines. That's probably a 4 pole so it would need to turn 1800rpms.
You don't HAVE to turn the generator at crank speed. (Belt drive or gearbox) Bear in mind though, that old style, synchronous generators are VERY inefficient. One source I found suggested less than 20%That makes sense, but the power is much reduced at 1800. for 30kw you would need at a minimum 30kw/746 = ~40 hp, which sounds reasonable. Probably need at least 60hp to cover surges and generator efficiency.
and thats no issue at 1800 rpms since its generating probably 200 lbft at the crank. so 200lbft at 1800rpm is close to 70hp.That makes sense, but the power is much reduced at 1800. for 30kw you would need at a minimum 30kw/746 = ~40 hp, which sounds reasonable. Probably need at least 60hp to cover surges and generator efficiency.
I thought is was a power steering pump looking closer its a governor to keep the alternator at 60HZ.
probably never been over 2,000 RPM
It has to run at 3600 rpm to get 60hz output.
We are talking about the "big" alternator, the green thing out back. You want a generator as close to 60hz as you can get. Some household devices are sensitive, although modern switch mode power supplies are not.Was he using the alternator to run household current?
In my neighborhood the owner of a Mustang shop has a hemi powered Victory Siren. He convinced the city to sell it to him and hired a crane to get it down from the roof it was mounted on.This reminded me of the Chrysler-powered air raid sirens. When Chrysler engineers set their minds to something it was usually no holds barred; powered by first gen hemis. It is still the loudest such device ever produced at 138 dB at 100 ft.
That's even louder than an Amber alert at 2 am.
The Chrysler Air Raid Siren Was So Powerful it Could Induce Rain | Amusing Planet
Chrysler Air-raid Siren
I havta say, this would be one toy you cannot "fully enjoy" LOL
WHAT???Chit, I'd bust that bad boy off till the county boys came out here. LOL
Your cats will NOT like you anymoreChit, I'd bust that bad boy off till the county boys came out here. LOL