I have a potential customer that wants to put a UPS and generator on their whole manufacturing plant.
Seems that their process is very sensitive to brown outs from the POCO and they lose a lot of $$$ when a brown out occurs.
They seem to be drawing about 650 amps at 480 volts and have two 150 ton chillers and many motors on their system.
They said that since there are many systems like cooling pumps and whatever else that runs their machines, it is too much trouble to separate the electrical to just what they want to back up, so they want to do the whole building.
Since there is the potential for a large inrush when a chiller starts or one of the large motors start, I don't think a static UPS will be the right application.
My Liebert guy agrees.
Does anyone have any experience with a rotary or flywheel UPS?
Also to determine the size required we want to record the service for a couple of weeks, but they insist they don't need that done since they can get a power profile from their electrical energy supplier that will provide our power utilization hour by hour for a full year.
I already told them that this is big bucks.
Once they get my price for this I think that moving the electrical circuits around to one distribution panel might be wiser so they are not backing up the the lights, AC and offices along with any other things that have nothing to do with their process.
Seems that their process is very sensitive to brown outs from the POCO and they lose a lot of $$$ when a brown out occurs.
They seem to be drawing about 650 amps at 480 volts and have two 150 ton chillers and many motors on their system.
They said that since there are many systems like cooling pumps and whatever else that runs their machines, it is too much trouble to separate the electrical to just what they want to back up, so they want to do the whole building.
Since there is the potential for a large inrush when a chiller starts or one of the large motors start, I don't think a static UPS will be the right application.
My Liebert guy agrees.
Does anyone have any experience with a rotary or flywheel UPS?
Also to determine the size required we want to record the service for a couple of weeks, but they insist they don't need that done since they can get a power profile from their electrical energy supplier that will provide our power utilization hour by hour for a full year.
I already told them that this is big bucks.
Once they get my price for this I think that moving the electrical circuits around to one distribution panel might be wiser so they are not backing up the the lights, AC and offices along with any other things that have nothing to do with their process.