From the Spec number, that should be basically a rebranded Kohler 250RZD/RZDB with a slightly reorganized DEC-3 16 Light Controller.Here is one that seems to fit my requirements.
Interesting, I always thought KW is KW no matter the prime mover.Natty gas doesn't have the power of diesel for motors . Gas is good for light loads not motors .
We do BIG gen sets and I only use cat . The one we just did in Oklahoma Was 3000 amps at 480 volt . The price of them will make you poop . They aint cheap not to mention the tornado requirements you will need to comply with .
In the 10-30 KW ranges, the same machine might have a KW rating for natural gas, another for propane. Propane makes an engine more powerful than it'd be on natural gas. I think about 9% difference.Interesting, I always thought KW is KW no matter the prime mover.
generatorsource.com
I wouldn't say that is necessarily the case. There will be ways of turning up the wick on any model of engine to make it produce the required power from an energy-poor fuel. All down to the control of fuelling and cramming sufficient air into it.I presume the gas fueled engines need to be bigger than diesels for the same KW rating.
I guess bigger was a poor choice of words. In Generac home standby machines the less costly models are the same machine, you only adjust the orfice from natural gas to propane. In some models they rate output lower for natural gas. Other models have an engine with adequate power to run the alternator at full rating.I wouldn't say that is necessarily the case. There will be ways of turning up the wick on any model of engine to make it produce the required power from an energy-poor fuel. All down to the control of fuelling and cramming sufficient air into it.
Electrically I would agree with you, it’s simply the amount of fuel required to produce whatever quantity of power that comes out of the generator end.Either way, is not a 200 kw genset a 200 kw genset, regardless of prime mover ?
and a 200 kw genset should run whatever loads up to 200 kw ?
Based on your OP I also thought that. TBH if the right set came up for sale you could probably go as big as 300 eKW and still be winning. The load on it would be adequate to keep the engine clean internally. I've seen the results of too many sets that were run at very low loads and it's not pretty.Based on Catsparky1 post, I think a 250 kw is probably a better choice than a 200 kw.
Sorry, I meant a Deep Sea controller retrofit, not Flight Systems.Marshall, I don't find anything via gogl about flight systems controller or davidson sales. Is this something that would improve the responsiveness of the generator? Was Spectrum a reseller that is no longer around?
www.davidsonsales.com