November-December 2004

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Two Backup Generators Are Better Than One, Dairy Finds

The milkmaid of America's agrarian past is long gone, replaced by automated machinery that depends on reliable power.

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By George Leposky

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Backup Is Critical

In its first 16 months of operation, the Stanfield farm sustained 30 utility-power outages, including one that lasted four hours. "The backup generators kicked on and we kept milking. If we hadn't had them, it would have been detrimental to the cows," Boyce says. The generators run the milking parlor's lights, milking machines, vacuum pumps, and the cooling system for the milk.

"There are five electrical services on this job site," says Dave Bennick, general manager of the farm's electrical contractor, DeLaval Direct Distribution in Chandler, AZ. "The milking parlor is the only one driven by this Gemini generator set." The others—serving a hospital barn, the feed-handling area, and two separate air-conditioning systems that help keep the cows cool—lack backup power because they don't really need it.

Nothing else on the farm is as critical as the milking parlor, Boyce insists, not even the water supply. A cow drinks about 30 gallons of water a day, a heifer about 15 gallons a day. Gravity flow from a 500,000-gallon storage tank keeps the cows' water troughs full. A 400-horsepower pump draws 1,800 gallons of water a minute from the farm's well into the storage tank, which holds a little over a day's supply. "We have a generator hookup for the water pump, so we could rent a portable generator if necessary," Boyce says.

When Utility Power Fails

The Gemini Twin Pack consists of two identical generator sets—each a 12-liter engine from Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. connected to a 375-kilowatt alternator made by Generac. Each generator set has its own mainline circuit breaker and a downstream control panel housing a 1,000-amp contactor connected to a transfer switch in a service closet inside the building.

Utility power comes in from the power pole, goes through the meter and a main circuit breaker, and enters the transfer switch, which "knows" to look for power. It has a small relay held open by utility power. A failure of utility power closes that relay, making the contacts that start the generators.

"When utility power fails, the signal is sent to the generator sets to start, run, and come up to speed," Sundquist explains. "The first generator set that is up to speed and voltage will close its contactor first. The second generator set will parallel with the first and then close its contactor, sending a signal to the transfer switch: 'We're ready to go on load.' Then the transfer switch rolls to its alternate position, connecting the generator set to the building load and accepting the load, and the lights come back on."

The startup sequence employs two timers:

  • A time-delay start timer to prevent nuisance blips in the utility power from triggering a startup
  • A transfer-delay neutral timer that allows large motors included in the facility load to wind down so the backup generator doesn't connect with them out of phase

Sundquist says most applications use a five-second setting for each timer, but "a few extra seconds won't bother the cows. The lights flicker for 10 or 20 seconds, long enough for motors to have to be restarted, but the motors in this very modern plant have automatic restarters."

When Utility Power Returns

Restoration of utility power opens the relay at the transfer switch, starting another sequence of timers to shut down the backup system:

  • A return-to-utility timer delays the shutdown long enough to ensure that the utility power is stable. This timer can be adjusted from five seconds to three minutes. Sundquist says it's usually set at about two minutes.
  • A minimum-run timer keeps the generators running for an optimal duration, even if utility power was restored prior to that time. "The generators are better off to run long enough for their temperature to stabilize, rather than shut them down too quickly," Sundquist explains. "The minimum run timer is adjustable from five minutes to 30 minutes, and is usually set at 15 minutes."
  • A cool-down timer. "After the transfer switch returns power to the utility, you don't want to shut off a hot engine, so to cool it down you run it for five minutes at full rpm but no load," Sundquist says.

"The engine does not cool well at idle, and there are several other reasons not to idle the engine.

"At idle, the oil pump and water pump of the typical engine have such a reduced capacity that the risk of overheating and oil pressure that is too low may be damaging to the engine. Also, whenever the rpm slows down, the voltage regulator attempts to maintain full voltage. If the rpm is too low, the voltage regulator gets overstressed by trying to do the impossible. Some generator sets have circuitry to disable the voltage regulator when the rpm is too low, but cooling down the engine at full rpm and no load is a better scenario."

Air flow through the engine at full rpm and no load also aids in the cooling process, Sundquist says. Air drawn in through the eaves of the enclosure passes across the two engines in opposite directions and through their radiators, then exits vertically in the center of the enclosure.

Brownout Protection

If the flow of utility power falls below a pre-specified percentage of its normal level (adjustable between 75% and 90%), the Gemini Twin Pack will start and provide brownout protection. It will shut down only when the utility power resumes an acceptable percentage of normal flow.

"The utility usually drops completely, negating this dropout requirement, but during a brownout the dropout and return voltage adjustments would be very important," Sundquist says.

"Having the voltage ever be as low as 80% would likely be very injurious to a facility's electric motors, and one would not want to go back to utility power after a brownout until the voltage had stabilized at near 95%."

Why Two Engines?

Sundquist says the major benefit of the two engines in the Gemini Twin Pack over a single engine is a 25% reduction in capital investment cost.

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"There is also a slight advantage in the ability of the two 375-kilowatt generator sets compared to a single unit when it comes to motor starting," he adds. The alternator on each generator set is rated at 400 kilowatts, whereas a single 750-kilowatt generator set would require an 800-kilowatt alternator. "With the two engines, you'll have a slightly better startup," Sundquist says. "The governors can respond faster to the inertia in the engines."

He explains that the two units operate in parallel by comparing voltage and speed. Isochronous governors count the teeth on the flywheels and turn that count into a reference voltage, within a specified window of acceptability. It won't be exactly 60 hertz, but it's close enough so the synchronizer recognizes the similarity and closes the contact for the first generator set. Then the second unit parallels with the first. Sometimes one unit connects first, sometimes the other. It's a random event.

Author's Bio: George Leposky is a science and technology writer based in Miami, FL.

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