Lifting A 30 Ton Generator Inside A Hydroelectric Power Plant
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- Опубликовано: 28 сен 2021
- Join Chris Boden as he takes you behind the scenes and shows the secret life of how a power plant REALLY works.
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a history of this power plant would be cool
I love those videos, good way to peek inside unaccessible places.
Thank you! I'm glad you like them. Feel free to share them! I'm just getting started and need to build an audience of interested people like you. :)
That disclaimer is unhinged 😂
I thought it was really interesting, on that chart, to see how additional threads add additional strength. Really cool! Of course, i really love this kind of practical nerdy stuff
In my mind it's good to let load 'settle' overnight if it hasn't been moved in decades. The last thing I would want is someone to immediately begin working underneath it only to later find out that it was 30 minutes away from catastrophic failure. I wouldn't know what kinds of hidden stress fractures after decades of operation there might be.
Is THAT rusty hall made for 30tons? wow
Thank you for these videos. I'm fascinated. What's the output capacity of the generator?
Nominally she'll do about 400kW or so, but right now the water's so low we're lucky to get half that.
Awesome explanation of everything, especially those jackscrews!
That is a hell of a point load under those bolts. With steal and concrete taking most of it. Ouch, that is a heck of a pinch point.
thanks for sharing. keep up the good work.
Not worried about the bolts, more the century old threads in the alternator base that they are in, as to the failure point. Those likely are the original moderately loose tolerance threads from manufacture, which are a lot more likely to shear before the bolt fails.
Fascinating. Big boy toys! 👍😎👍
How many lifting bolts are there and what is the engagement depth of the hold down bolts, also thanks for taking us along, I really enjoy load transfer and rigging, generators are about as cool as things get
Last snarky comment aside, how is this beauty actually connected to the grid? Can you walk us through what's connected where and how?
Boca water treatment plant.
I workered in the water treatment plants in South Florida. Lot of big heavy work. Where are you guys and where do yo work. I find your videos very interesting. And did alot of the same kind of work. I currently work at the city of boca Raton. In south Florida. Typically pump 60 M G D
I'm in the wilds of Michigan, working for a fleet of small-scale hydropower plants. I don't know how much water we move in a day.....let's see.....we're at about 400 Cubic feet of water per second today, so that's....what, about 250 MGD give or take?
Isn’t it conservative to use clamp force for a jack bolt considering it’s a compressive load? Or is the limiting factor the sheer strength of the threads?
19 tons in my book i could crush the end of.1,8. 😅
I really enjoy these videos and the disclaimer. Yes I read the whole thing and NO I don't know why what passes laughingly as my brain makes me do these things. Oh and you are missing an R on one of your words. WHAT? I did say I read the WHOLE thing!
i have a ? is it possible once the gen is in phase to overpower it to skip phase or overrun the phasing
Why are there no dots on the bolts that reveal the SAE grade? Are they really old?
Did you buy this lovely Hydropower plant?
Is that a GE unit? Any location on the nameplate? Peterborough or Schenectady?
What happens in the event of an unforeseen grid disconnect? Is there some safety equipment that prevents the generator overspending and shuts it down?
Yes, there's a video in this series all about it. :)
@@Physicsduck ahh right I’ll go have looksee for it🧐
I want to hear Chris say “GIGGIDY”
Skookum AF Mr. Boden!
Where is this hydro power plant located?
In the beautiful countryside of Ottawa County, Michigan.
At time 6:40 there is a rectangular red ish thing with a sign a sign that says" danger high voltage. " What is it?
Those are the generator leads heading outside to the transformer.
lots of neat parts in the generator. you probably drove to gr.
The dead lamp in one of the lights offends my soul.
I've always wondered something about hydroelectric power, but whenever i ask i end up drawing an awful lot of suspicious gazes and few replies..
Do all of the systems have redundancies, or are there any single points of failure that cannot be helped?
(I had an electrical engineering friend tell me, years ago, that when it comes to powering the grid, "There will always be SPOFs, the best you can do is improve ways to mitigate damage".
So, seeing you make these videos about this hydro plant, i've had his statement rattling around in my head XD
You must be from the Pac NW. Skookum eh ?