the generator will have a timing circuit to turn on and off the coil at 60 times per second. you must change the values of the timing circuit to achieve this. definitely need an o-scope and the manufacturer's schematics to accomplish this
The voltage and frequency ARE the output of the generator. If you change the fuel to the generator, it will change speed, and the voltage will change. Less fuel = less speed = lower frequency = lower voltage.
you can't
You need a 5.5kw generator to run a 5.5kw motor.
60Hz generator can be operated at 50Hz as along as certain conditions are met.Basically the problem is that there is a max flux achieveble in any given machine and EA = K(pie)(w) the max allowable E changes when the speed is changed. Vltage must be derated to 50/60 or 83.3% of its original value. jUst the opposite effect happen when 60Hz generator is operated at 50Hz.
The frequency of a grid system is set by the rotation of the generating equipment. If you have a small generator, the frequency can be increased by increasing the speed in revolutions per minute of the engine driving the generator.
isochronous means generator zero drop during parale operationdroop means the generator at 100% load the frequency is50 HZand at no load have more tahn 5oHz eg.. generator set at 4% droop it means at no load the frequency is 104% x 50Hz.
Can it run a : model-bq323pa-ice cream machine. 220volt/50hz Power consumption : 1.7kw+0.3kw Pre coolingrefrigerant:R134a
No. 5Kva is a power rating, standing for 5 kilovolt/Amps, 5,000 v/a. This is how much a generator or tranformer can handle or output. 50Hz is the frequency of an A/C waveform, power supply, generally used in the UK and influenced countries. 50 cycles per second.
Yes. 240 volts at 10 amps is 2400 watts. The generator is 2500 watts maximum. If the generator is 2500 peak power it may not run it very long. If the continuous power rating is at least 2400 watts it should be OK.
Frequency is a function of engine speed and the number of poles in the generator end. For instance, a speed of 1500 RPM turning a four-pole generator will produce 50 hz. The formula is: Frequency = (poles/2) * (RPM/60) From the formula, you can see that the same frequency would be produced by a two-pole generator spinning at 3000 RPM.
no
3-50hz mean = -47