S
SteveW
Guest
On 20/03/2023 18:13, Scott Lurndal wrote:
Grid management predicts loads and they have steam up and turbines
spinning before the large increase in demand, with increased output from
already producing station, pumped storage, gas turbine, diesel, etc. to
fill rapid increases until other producers can be brought online.
The Natural Philosopher <tnp@invalid.invalid> writes:
On 18/03/2023 11:17, Sylvia Else wrote:
On 18-Mar-23 8:39 pm, Commander Kinsey wrote:
An electrician (who I don\'t believe) told me if there\'s too much power
on the grid, they use wind turbines as fans to absorb extra power. Is
this really true? Aren\'t there plenty of power stations they can just
turn down a bit? Take your foot off the gas so to speak?
I was also disturbed to hear from him it costs £700 to install smart
meters into each home. And in the UK that comes from green tax.
Shouldn\'t that tax be being spent on making more green energy,
building new wind farms?
Coal fired power stations cannot change their output rapidly,
Tell that to any operator of a steam locomotive.
There are massive differences between steam locomotives and
plants that generate electricity using steam.
? Of course they can.
All reliable generators except hydro take a bit of time to get steam up,
but there is energy in to boilers to cope with medium term peaks of a
few minutes.
A given generator needs to spin at a specific frequency, and the margins on
that frequency are very small.
Where multiple generators are fed from a common steam prime mover, the startup
time for any one generator is on the order of 10\'s of minutes - far too
long to respond to large changes in demand.
Grid management predicts loads and they have steam up and turbines
spinning before the large increase in demand, with increased output from
already producing station, pumped storage, gas turbine, diesel, etc. to
fill rapid increases until other producers can be brought online.