It brings a question to my mind. The driving torque in electrical machines is transmitted electromagnetically between rotor and the stator accross the airgap. Normally we think about the torque on the rotor (which drives the load in a motor) but there is indeed an equal / opposite reaction torque on the stator which gets transmitted to the foundation (on motors and generators).
For fluid machines (pumps, fans, and turbines), the amount of any torque on the stationary parts is a little more mysterious to me as was discussed here: thread404-259495
This machine in op has 2 supports under the electrical machine but only one support under the fluid machine. Obviously two supports can help the baseplate resist movement under the influence of torque from the mounted machine a lot better than 1 support can. It leads me to believe that maybe the designer of this support thinks the stationary turbine parts do not experience any significant torque. Would you guys agree?
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(2B)+(2B)' ?