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>> It can be applying its maximum power into a grid that is still short of power, which is probably a better situation than if it was not doing that.

> One of the parent posts correctly identified there are thermal issues with operating at significantly off nominal frequencies for extended time periods

Yeah, that's very much the problem. Power sources that burn fuel to generate electricity generally don't like being run at 100% throttle for long periods of time. In a low frequency situation you've got potentially multiple countries of generators all running flat out trying to get the frequency back to where it's supposed to be. If they reduce throttle without having something else come online to take the place of the energy they were producing, the line frequency drops further.

Nuclear has its own issue with running full throttle: once a plant has been running at 100%, it takes time for it to throttle back down and might not be possible to immediately throttle back up. There's decay heat from the fission products and there's short-ish lived (up to 40-50 hours though) neutron poisons.



By thermal issues I meant electrical heating of windings in rotor,stator,transformer due to impedance changes with frequency.

I have only worked on one steam turbine and it had no issue running with the throttle valve wide open all day long.

Every system has a maximum continuous output capacity and I would expect the controls to limit the output so as not to damage the equipment.

I’m curious what sources you are aware of that can’t run at a maximum continuous output all day




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