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It is the heat flux generated due to ignition of fuel at the spark plug
5.274 KW
Depends upon the Kw rating of the generator. The higher the Kw rating the more fuel will be used.
Since the breaker that is installed on the generator set will be sized to the output of the 30 kW generator, the load will stay connected until the thermal trip of the breaker trips the load off line. This will be in the matter of seconds before it happens. To handle a 75 kW load and depending if it is an inductive or a resistive load you will need at least a 80 to 100 kW generator.
It depends on the total connected load (KW) of the house. If the total connected load is about 20 KW the alternator generator should be designed to meet peak 20 kw load
A 5 kW generator would turn it over but if the full 30 hp of mechanical power is needed, that would require about 30 kW of electric power from the generator.
480V.
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At 746 watts per horsepower (electric) a 35 kw generator would require about 470 horsepower. Round that up, and allowing for control loop margin and mechanical losses, I would guess that a 35 kw generator should need a 500 or 600 horsepower engine.
Onan diesel generator sets are available in sizes ranging from 10kW to 2.5 MW. Spark-ignited gas generators range from 5 to 150 kW in size. Lean-burn gas generators are available in 315 kW to 2 MW sizes.
Frequency is the speed that the generator revolves, not the sizing of the generator.
About 8hp (5 kW).