140 kg/cm2
Thermal power station of 210mw will work on principle of modified Rankine cycle
Project Date of Contract Description Date of Completion Guddu Thermal Power Station Unit No.4, Pakistan (210MW, Oil-fired) 1983 Surveying, designing, manufacturing, supplying, installation, commissioning, personnel-training 1986.6 Jamshoro Thermal Power Station Unit No.2, Pakistan (210MW, Oil/gas-fired) 1987 Turn-key project 1989.12.3 Jamshoro Thermal Power Station Unit No.3, Pakistan (210MW, Oil/gas-fired) 1987 1990.6.7 Jamshoro Thermal Power Station Unit No.4, Pakistan (210MW, Oil/gas-fired) 1987 1991.1.21 Chittagong Thermal Power Station Unit No.1, Bangladesh (210MW, Gas-fired) 1989.11.17 1993.4.18 Muzaffargarh Thermal Power Station Unit No.5, Pakistan (210MW, Oil/gas-fired) 1991.9 1995.2.14 Muzaffargarh Thermal Power Station Unit No.6, Pakistan (210MW, Oil/gas-fired) 1991.9 1995.8.14 Muzaffargarh Thermal Power Station Unit No.4, Pakistan (320MW, Oil/gas-fired) 1993.5 1996.12 Chittagong Thermal Power Station Unit No.2, Bangladesh (210MW, Gas-fired) 1994.7 1997.7 Kuching Thermal Power Station Unit No.1, Malaysia (50MW, Coal-fired) 1994.11.22 1994.5.8 1997.7 Kuching Thermal Power Station Unit No.2, Malaysia (50MW, Coal-fired) 1994.11.22 1994.5.8 1997.9 Power Plant Air Cooling System, Iran 1996.7 Complete equipment for 14 sets of air cooling system 1999.12 Thermal Power Station Units 1 &2 (2×325MW), Azerbaijan, Iran 1997.3 Survey, design, manufacture, supply, supervision of installation, commissioning, testing, etc. Scheduled in Dec. 2002 Diesel Power Station 2×6600KW Ahead, Sudan 1998.3 Turn-key project Scheduled in Dec. 2002 Iraq Gas Turbine Generating Set (6x37MW) 1998.8 2000.8 Philippines Oil-fired Thermal Power Plant (2x15KW) 1997
The description "210 MegaWatt" refers to the maximum power output capacity of the power plant. All it says is that the power plant was designed to generate a maximum of 210 MW of electrical power continuously. It does not refer to any particular period of time, neither a second, an hour or a year, nor does it tell you that the power plant is always generating power at its maximum rate.What it actually produces during a particular period of one hour depends on the demands made on it to deliver power. For instance sometimes it may only be running at half-power and at other times it may not be producing any power at all if it is "off-line".What the question may show some confusion about is the "total energy produced" by such a power plant during a period of one hour or the "total energy consumed" by a locality such as town - or by some very large electrical equipment - during a period of one hour .People have to pay for the total energy they consume over a period of time and that is measured in MegaWatt-hours (MW-h) for a power station. It is measured in KiloWatt-hours (KW-h) for a normal home or small office building, etc. A total amount of electrical energy equal to 210 MW-h can produced by a 210 MW power plant in a period of one hour but that is not necessarily what it always produces.