That generator is beautiful. Magnificent engineering and it's 120 years old.
@lostsierraforrest5542Ай бұрын
Outstanding presentation. I'm a former electronics technician and engineer, electricity fascinates me to this day. How wonderful that Switzerland had the sense to preserve this piece of technological history and keeps it not only in working order but available for the public to view and enjoy and learn from.
@ninocpsАй бұрын
Personally, I could watch this equipment working all day. It's simple but magnificent, and it's satisfying to see it in action.
@MervynPartin2 ай бұрын
It may be small compared with the turbo-alternators that I operated and maintained in my former career, but it is a beautiful machine. It looks in great condition, and well maintained.
@IanBrodie-bg1luАй бұрын
Best and simplest explanation of power generation that I have ever heard.
@IvanStepaniukАй бұрын
Amazing! and it LOOKS LIKE NEW! My old high school in Argentina, the Escuela Tecnica Otto Krause, maintains and runs a comparable steam generator every year. It is a bigger compound machine, made in Germany in 1913. It was used to provide electricity to government buildings in Buenos Aires, and remained operational as an educational and historical piece all this years. It produced short of 80 kW during the test run I attended to, dumped onto rows of banks of incandescent bulbs. The limiting factor is, I believe, the state of the rusty old boiler, which was not entirely safe at the working pressure (~12 kg/cm2).
@patrickshaw8595Ай бұрын
I will remember this and when my ship gets in I'll get them a titanium boiler made.
@pauljohnstone47232 ай бұрын
The description of how everything worked was really well done and easy to follow.
@arcticpilotshow44402 ай бұрын
The makers of this machine must be very proud that this machine is still being used to generate electricity.
@sandro-here2 ай бұрын
I'm afraid, they're dead (or 150+ years old)
@PatrickKQ4HBD2 ай бұрын
@@sandro-here 😢😂
@arcticpilotshow44402 ай бұрын
@@sandro-here Yes I know, assuming there is some afterlife but most likely it is not the case.
@sandro-here2 ай бұрын
@@arcticpilotshow4440 I'm an engineer, I happily leave that discussion to other people 😀
@СергейСтришко-м4уАй бұрын
@@sandro-hereздравствуйте у меня есть безтоплевный генератор который работает от искуственого созданого давления воды
@peterwexler5737Ай бұрын
Machines of the late 18 and early 1900s were so much more stylish than they are today. I used to work at 312 N. Spring St. in Los Angeles, CA on the 15th floor where one of two elevator rooms was stationed. Once in a while, the maintenance guy would do some work on the 1930s era equipment. I would poke my head into the room and look at all of the machinery, and it looked so good by today's standards. The same is true for this generator equipment. Very nice.
@Equoris2 ай бұрын
"Alternative current", must be one of those new age things... ;) Teasing aside, great video, I do love those large diameter low RPM AC generators!
@sandro-here2 ай бұрын
Hahaha yeah ran straight into that one :-D thanks though!
@sarj743Ай бұрын
Thank you to everyone involved in bringing these videos together. It's the first time in my experience the whole power generation sequence has been not only explained but shown as well.
@andyfeimsternfei8408Ай бұрын
Beautiful! I have spent over 40 years working on hydroelectric generators dating back as far as 1896 that are still in operation today. Many of the dams and turbines date back further, before the advent of AC.
@mernokimuvekАй бұрын
Tesla and Westinghouse won the current war in 1893. 1896 was the time of AC.
@hiteck007Ай бұрын
You lucky buggar, that is so interesting. The local hydro plant here( Tully N.Q. Australia) had 4 X 17 or 18 Mega watts alternators before the upgrade, then after the upgrade the new Alternators have 24 Megawatts in the same size somehow with only one inch nozzles @ 2000 Psi, that's a scary pressure when you look at the size of the pipelines. Anyway I liked it before the upgrade because they had the Flyball governors out in the open just spinning around but now it's all electronic. You know how it is, progress isn't always a good thing but they did it for accuracy's sake & automation. Such an impressive place built into the side of a mountain.
@milolouis2 ай бұрын
They should use the resistor load to pre-heat the boiler water.
@sandro-here2 ай бұрын
The machine runs 3x for roughly 10 minutes, 3 or 4 times per year for the public to see. It's a museum piece, efficiency is not the goal here (if it was, it would have been dismantled a long time ago)
@milolouis2 ай бұрын
@@sandro-here Sorry I didn't mean to sound critical. It's very cool.
@sandasturner95292 ай бұрын
I want to make a scaled down version of this!!!!
@sandro-here2 ай бұрын
@@milolouis No offense taken 🙂
@sammy55762 ай бұрын
They should connect it to the grid
@Melanie16040Ай бұрын
Absolutely beautiful!!! Thank you for taking the time to film this and share it with the rest of us!!!
@draabe42Ай бұрын
On internet, there are two kinds of videos 1) where people do broken dances for a song and get likes, and 2) awesome videos like this
@Timothyshannon-fz4jx2 ай бұрын
That is an amazing machine, clearly still working and probably better built then its modern counterparts, traditional engineering IS the best.
@psxtuneservice2 ай бұрын
Well industrial grade is still OK. Just consumer grade is the problem
@ronhoover4367Ай бұрын
It looks cool and I love it , but there truly is no comparison between what we can do today compared to a century ago when it comes to machining or designing.
@SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans76482 ай бұрын
It's been so long since I studied electromechanical systems, but it is changing magnetic lines of force cutting across the wires of a coil that produces electromotive force. This would require orienting your stator coil/coils 90 degrees into the plane of the drawing from what you've shown, with allowance of course for the shaft to pass.
@wetwareerror95112 ай бұрын
Excellent, clear concise and informative.
@MrEditor60002 ай бұрын
Very informative. At one time, someone figured out how to build an original, small, prototype in their garage or shed.
@johnkelly7264Ай бұрын
These guys know how to restore and maintain a machine. So cool. Subbed here.
@neutrodyneАй бұрын
You did an excellent job explaining and showing how everything is done.
@st.charlesstreet98762 ай бұрын
Extremely fascinating 😮 Thank You for letting us see this museum piece on KZbin ❤
@simon88642 ай бұрын
Yes! And I bet it produces a nice clean waveform
@zinckensteel2 ай бұрын
Wow - more than half your nation's power comes from Hydro? That is admirable, be proud!
@TheScrappingJeahaha2 ай бұрын
Some of the biggest rivers in Europe arise in Switzerland, so hydro power is an abundant source of energy there.
@lo27402 ай бұрын
a loot of mountains, a lot of streams, very small population, i would say its more logical than anything else, any country with identical condition does that, because its basically free electricity.
@harrypitts73892 ай бұрын
Beautiful. Thank you.
@laura-ann.0726Ай бұрын
I love the look of old machines like this, that museum staff keeps clean, polishing the brass and keeping it running.
@mathewst39792 ай бұрын
your videos are always fun to watch!
@keesvandenbroek33128 күн бұрын
In the Netherlands a steam powered pumping station, which has been decommissioned a long time ago, is still being used as a backup for the new pumps. When there is high demand, it is fired up. So, a museum but still having an economical value. It’s the Wouda gemaal in Lemmer Friesland. You can visit it and once in a while it is powered up for maintenance and training. Being fed by coal at first but now oil burning.
@andrewmichleski36492 ай бұрын
That was very educational for me. Now i understand how 3 fs power is made...
@georgeblack589Ай бұрын
That generator and engine are magnificent, thanks for the video.
@davidquirk80972 ай бұрын
Another excellent video Sandro. Thank you.
@Shadeewolf2 ай бұрын
What a beautiful gem!!! not to mention rare!
@doogie8122 ай бұрын
Beautiful Machine!
@Mr.ky89Ай бұрын
A bulky generator from ancient times until now it still works, that's great, it's the premise for today's generators, thank you for sharing.
@williamgibb55572 ай бұрын
Engineering and technology at its finest! Brilliant minds can accomplish anything and everything.
@leosmith848Ай бұрын
Superb 'state of the art' turn of the century example of a power station.
@sawimi12342 ай бұрын
Great video! Much historical and scientific knowledge, I learned a lot. Thank You!
@hiteck007Ай бұрын
You know that was a great video with excellent details for those of us that know what we're looking at by that I mean showing us the ID plate and 215 Kva is way more power than I thought it was capable of. That is nearly capable of running a small town. Also very cruide voltage regulation and as you know it's done with an AVR (Automatic Voltage Regulator) these days. Such an impressive machine, I would really like to see it in person one day.
@nhanhnguyen35422 ай бұрын
Great video.
@ltech4174Ай бұрын
This was a really great video!!! Thumbs UP!
@Jake-ph6flАй бұрын
Very cool and educative, Thanks for the video.
@lbochtler2 ай бұрын
they should install grid tie switches and a synchro scope to allow it to use the grid as load.
@fanplant2 ай бұрын
Is that what those 3 lightbulbs are for?
@lbochtler2 ай бұрын
@@fanplant no. they probably indicate the operation of various things like the exciter. A synchroscope is a needle type instrument where basically put, 2 motors are connected together via a differential gear (like in a car). One motor is connected to the power plants generator, the other to the grid. Usually there are also light bulbs connected to indicate the phase angle error. When the generator is in sync with the grid, the needle of the synchroscope should be at the 12 o'clock position, and not move. There is also the option of the needle being stationary at the 6 o'clock position, which would indicate that the generator and grid are 180° out of phase. If the generator is tied to the grid with a phase error, the generator will be forcefully moved to be in sync. This will draw significant current as it tries to phase advance or retard in a single rotation to match the grid. If this happens the grid ties trip (basically big circuit breakers) and the generator is taken offline again. In case of the lights mentioned previously, they will be off when in phase and frequency, and brightly illuminated if 180° out of phase, and slowly oscillate from bright to dark by the frequency error, same goes for the synchroscope needle. Basically put, the grid ties engage all 3 phases simultaneously, else the generator will run out of sync and try to shake its self apart if the ties do not trip (overcurrent). If you want to see what that looks like, look for the video "Gen 1 Desync" by "GITsL9l". Its a short where you can see what happens when a generator falls out of sync due to the turbines (presumably) slowing down too much.
@fanplant2 ай бұрын
@@lbochtler sorry I'm aware what a syncroscope is and it can be done with 3 bulbs.
@lbochtler2 ай бұрын
@@fanplant true, its unusual to see someone that knows what it is and how it works. My point with the switches below the lights and that one being lit all the time, still stands.
@fanplant2 ай бұрын
@@lbochtler I watched it again and agree you are correct. Good eye
@teolynx3805Ай бұрын
Old good alternator with DC exciter generator but to be honest there even were alternators getting excitation from exciter generator which also have even smaller sub-exciter DC generator. (Sorry if I named them wrong because English isn't my native language) I love All those old machinery and as an engineer I really admire by predecessors work. Isn't it a wonder having a weaker theoretical knowledge and less computational power ( logarithmic rule instead of modern computers) they made all things that power our world.
@kpdvw2 ай бұрын
Salue! Danke fuer diese einfache vom Laien verstehbare Erklaerung....!
@kpdvw2 ай бұрын
one further explanation: the difference between VPeak to Peak and V RMS Voltages...!
@henrycarlson7514Ай бұрын
A fine explanation , Thank You
@moschettiflavio3635Ай бұрын
I'm building a 1:25 scale model of a Three Phase generator coupled with a 25mm pelton turbine, I was struggling A LOT trying to understand how to wind up the three phase coils. Your video is really helpful because it confirms my zig-zag hypothesis. I think I should put 4/5 wires for each phase and be able to turn on some 2v LEDs. A smaller cc motor will provide for the inductor coils, again, coupled with a pelton turbine
@sandro-hereАй бұрын
Very cool! Will you do a video?
@kubeek2 ай бұрын
2:12 the physical relation between the coil and the magnet is wrong. The magnet would need to rotate back to front to induce voltage in the coil.
@XMarkxyzАй бұрын
That's beautiful and really well kept, another interesting topic would be syncronization to the grid or other generators but looks like it would impossible to show it with this one being disconnected
@brianrhodebeck6465Ай бұрын
Amazing I sent this video to myself i have planned to make one but out of my big dryer That came to me for free nice video
@UPR91Ай бұрын
Sure the kid have been loving turning that power. Maybe he doesn't know but he has been "manipulated" in a good way to become an engineer. Great explanation and nice dad job in a same time
@ssliworldpeace8 күн бұрын
I am a electrical engineering graduate but I unable to understand fully ie 100% after watching 3 times, I can only understand around 70%, but I think u have done a perfect job on this video, my whole career profession is on factory operations management, I have more thing to learn on electric engineering.
@terrymoorecnc250028 күн бұрын
Exceptionally good machine work especially when you take in to consideration it's date of mfg. The original manufacturers were excellent craftsmen.
@caoimhin7122Ай бұрын
Awesome video! Question: isn’t 60Hz more efficient from a production standpoint?
@sandro-hereАй бұрын
Thanks! Appearently 60hz is more efficient for longer distance transmission, but I doubt that is the historical reason why international grids run at a given frequency.
@caoimhin7122Ай бұрын
@@sandro-here It would be an interesting subject for a future video. By the way, Nikola Tesla advocated for 240v at 60Hz.
@sandro-hereАй бұрын
@@caoimhin7122 While this would certainly be an interesting video, It wouldn't fit the "Mighty Machines" format unfortunately. In this playlist, I present actual machines from my own footage, not focusing on historical anecdotes.
@daicekubeАй бұрын
Really interesting! Thank you for this one!
@SLeslie2 ай бұрын
5:00 You are confusing phase voltage to line voltage. If that generator has 220V between its phases, then it has a phase voltage of 127 Volts and first it needs to be connected to a transformer.
@sudeephalder422720 күн бұрын
Very well explained 🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤
@IWANNAGOBACKTOTHEWAIFUSWOMBАй бұрын
amazing its first time for me seeing working rotary converter
@abundantharmonyАй бұрын
Inertial wheels of death are my favorite momentum thingies.
@goodtoshi2 ай бұрын
Such a beautiful machine
@TheMoppersmurf2 ай бұрын
Very interesting and very well explained!
@jandoerlidoe34122 ай бұрын
very good, expert explanation.... the exhaust steam of the engine is just expelled in the air...Was the machine original not condensing the exhaust steam ?
@sandro-here2 ай бұрын
Thanks! Yes it was, but I explain that in part 1, along with why it's currently just expelled.
@lorumipsum1129Ай бұрын
We have one of those at our abandoned steel plants, exposed too the elements as it was replaced by a gas plant for the mill a few decades later
@qwertyuiop-kd4qq2 ай бұрын
Love your videos, do you plan on doing more ropeway content in the future?
@sandro-here2 ай бұрын
Thank you! I'm still fascinated by ropeways, so there are good chances for another one to come up in the future! I usually have more contact with those in the winter (due to skiing), but I have several such projects in the backlog which are not that easy to get acces too. Let's see what the future brings 🙂
@MarcQuiclic2 ай бұрын
5:03 sagt 220 V zwischen den Phasen. Müsste das nicht 400 V sein?
@MarcQuiclic2 ай бұрын
5:03 sagt 220 V zwischen den Phasen. Müsste das nicht 400 V sein?
@SimonBauer72 ай бұрын
normal sind es 230v zwischen l und n und 400v zwischen zwei phasen. der generator produziert halt was anderes. oder es ist ein fehler@@MarcQuiclic
@bodyanone51562 ай бұрын
@@MarcQuiclic 127 V (L-N) (220V 3 phase)
@andyash5675Ай бұрын
It's a nice vid, but I'd have been interested to understand how the speed and line frequency is stabilised. Not sure if it's just a straight mechanical regulator, or perhaps other special measures.
@sandro-hereАй бұрын
Perhaps part 1 (about the steam engine driving the thing) will answer your question. It illustrates a mechanical speed regulator that automatically adjusts the power level.
@100dampfАй бұрын
Not sure if you covered it in the first video, but steam engine are pretty bad backups, needing quite some time to start up. Did they keep a boiler under steam the whole time so the steam engine can be started immediately
@valtersludvigs2298Ай бұрын
They used steam in other processes on site, so they always had steam. As long as you have steam you can start such a steam engine in about 10-15 minutes from cold. But it is not great for the engine to be heated up so quickly.
@jamesburns8247Ай бұрын
Back in the 70s I worked at Mohawk Rubber in Akron OH where we ran very similar aynchronous motors to run the 74 inch Mill Lines and Banberry mixers
@eneto7785Ай бұрын
When all today´s digital marvels finally fail and burn, this humble and tough machine will keep generating steadily.
@Captain_Char2 ай бұрын
i might be wrong here, but the howling might be caused by eddie currents in the field coils, and they even out, im surprised the machine hasn't been kept as a backup generator
@uploadJ2 ай бұрын
Easier to rent a Cat (Caterpillar) at 200 plus kw then all it needs is diesel fuel and one push button to start it though ...
@thegreeneyej20 күн бұрын
Good stuff. Thank you.
@Daniel-du4umАй бұрын
5:02 Isnt there a mistake? I just dont get how you can have in Switzerland 220V between phases and 230 between phase and neutral? With phase shift 120degrees, L-L voltage should be 1.73 of L-N voltage.
@sandro-hereАй бұрын
Switzerland has 230 V between L and N. But this generator has 220 V between L and L, which is unrelated and incompatible indeed. There is a transformer that was used when the Swiss voltage was changed.
@Daniel-du4umАй бұрын
@@sandro-here oh i understood now, the 230V was a reference to previous graph. Thought that the generator has 230 LN and 220 LL
@sandro-hereАй бұрын
@@Daniel-du4um Yeah I explained that poorly. You are the second person to ask it.
@valtersludvigs2298Ай бұрын
@@Daniel-du4um To be more precise 220 LL and 127 LN
@vincentrobinette15072 ай бұрын
What was the thermal efficiency of this steam generator? what is the optimum wattage for brake specific fuel consumption?
@joecummings12602 ай бұрын
I would imagine it is really poor, especially because the condenser froze and cracked and the exhaust is directly vented to the atmosphere
@valtersludvigs2298Ай бұрын
@@joecummings1260 At the moment we put 1'100 kw of heat into our boiler to get approximately 30kw of electricity out. If the condenser wasn't cracked and we would run the engine at the optimal load, we could double if not triple the efficiency.
@joecummings1260Ай бұрын
@@valtersludvigs2298 Yeah you have your exhaust pushing against full atmospheric, and plus you are losing your warm condensate water. Do you have a deaerator tank? I would imaging running completely on makeup water you must be spending a fortune on water treatment chemicals
@ronaldwest2264Ай бұрын
Oh, wow! What a beautiful piece of old machinery! I suspect that it never looked this gorgeous when it was new. The restorers used different bright colors and polished it up, making it look new and shiny, only better. Added bonus... totally impervious to an EMP attack because it has no electronics to get fried. The keepers of the grid should go back to old school steam engines and steam driven generators, just like this one. There should be absolutely zero energy shortage, since North America has lots of coal to fire the steam engines with.
@valtersludvigs229825 күн бұрын
I can assure you that it looked just as as nice when was new, we even have the old photos to prove that. Sulzer were proud of there engineering and they wanted to show that.
@garniful2 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharin manh, beautiful videos manh, good luck man 🌹
@ron5948Ай бұрын
11:31 in a more modern setting you would jump start electromagnet with a battery? But how do you connect the rotor to that battery ron ??? 😅 Preferably wirelessly somehow hihi 11:31
@assetstopurchase8432Ай бұрын
I was thinking producing steam with a parabolic solar-thermal generator during the day, saving it in a boiler, and using it at after sunset all through the night.
@DandyDon12 ай бұрын
What is the current source of fuel to create steam for the engine? Is it oil or natural gas?
@sandro-here2 ай бұрын
Natural gas. If you're interested in the boilers, see part 1 where they are shown in detail.
@VynVdragon2 ай бұрын
If you want to see another like it but bigger, there's one in electropolis in Mulhouse
@FlorinSutuАй бұрын
Just remember, since 1904 the ferromagnetic materials carrying the magnetic flux, improved a lot. Also, the formulas for designing electric transformers, motors and generators, were perfected. So, when you use an electric generator from 1904, the problem is not the steam engine, is the generator itself. In university I followed the specialization for designing electric motors, transformers and generators, so I know what I am writing.
@robertrichardson5396Ай бұрын
What is the rated output? The nameplate shows 215 KVA.
@IvanStepaniukАй бұрын
That IS the rated output. Generators are rated in apparent power because it's assumed that the load will not be purely resistive. For resistive loads, 215 kVA = 215 kW
@purnendumishra4079Ай бұрын
Very nice electricity generator
@jasonlin5884Ай бұрын
The illustration at 2:14 is incorrect. because there is no any magnetic flux change.
@Myrune12 ай бұрын
I didn't realize that Europe was on 220(ish) 50 hz that early. Interesting.
@davidrr87412 ай бұрын
I still have a pair of doubts. Does the mini-DC generator has a capacitor to smooth furthermore his current? And also I'd be glad to know or hear the story about how that variable resistor was manipulated in order to attend the demand of power during the day, we are so in between technology that I can't imagine that a man had to do that!.
@MrToradragonАй бұрын
Those large dynamos have many poles and all the coils are in some way interconnected, so the current should be reasonably smooth, also it feeds large coils which should behave as chokes and thus also smoothing out the DC.
@biofall382 ай бұрын
I wish I could own something this amazing
@jeffsaxton716Ай бұрын
My area is powered by various sources of electric power, but since we're swimming in natural gas (Intermountain West), lots of it is coming from not coal gas, but natural gas. It's a good peak handling source.
@barryphillips70982 ай бұрын
Prior to 1900 England's industry was powered Steam!!
@KrisDouglas2 ай бұрын
More like 1950!
@barryphillips70982 ай бұрын
@@KrisDouglas incorrect! the English industrial prior ran on STEAM power!!!
@lukedoherty80622 ай бұрын
@@barryphillips7098he wasn’t disputing that but steam power lived on into the 1900s. Some pumping stations were still steam Powered into the 70s before electricity took over
@ІгорЛисенко-ж9нАй бұрын
Spectacular.
@johngreen23162 ай бұрын
A work of art.
@offgriddАй бұрын
Nice explaining, keep up the good works! This set might even survive a nuclear war too 🙃
@Dannysoutherner7 күн бұрын
I love this!
@nedt2 ай бұрын
Excellent video thankyou
@robertpeters94382 ай бұрын
How stable is the frequency with only one steam cylinder?
@uploadJ2 ай бұрын
Within the capability of the fly-ball speed regulator at the very most ...
@valtersludvigs2298Ай бұрын
@@uploadJ at a stable load is the frequency rely stable, only if the load changes does the frequency vary a few Hz.
@uploadJАй бұрын
@@valtersludvigs2298 Now we get into closed-loop, feedback network theory ... it depends on the 'gain' of the flyball governor - how much do they move for a given rotational speed change.
@myriaddsystems2 ай бұрын
Aw with all it's little noises it's very cute really
@radioflyer9490Ай бұрын
Very interesting!🇨🇦
@richardbrobeck23842 ай бұрын
Great Video I think they should maybe run more lighting from that generator why waste it in a resistor bank !
@Kwint.2 ай бұрын
So interesting!
@10001577520 күн бұрын
Very cool. Since it's for demonstration only, If they had powered a resistive water heater they could cut down on their fuel costs for making steam
@geoffkeeler51062 ай бұрын
Excellent!
@TechnoMagi-h4rАй бұрын
That Monster attached to the right generator could power a small Town...
@duglasdlcd8393Ай бұрын
Ahora en la actualidad se podría mejorar esa excitatriz y usar diodos para rectificar los polos salientes , y ademas usar una avr para alimentar los campos de. La excitatriz y fuera escobillas .