Dear RRN,
Some conceptual clarifications - various definitions:
1) Spinning Reserve-
Reliability is also of great concern to the system dispatcher, who must plan for the possibility that one or more generators may fail to produce power at any time. This is done by ensuring that other generators are available on short notice. But, most generating units require a 12 to 18 hour warm-up period. Large utility systems operate several units partially loaded at all times, so they can be brought up to full load quickly if and when they are needed.
THIS ROLLING RESERVE or spinning reserve is the remaining capacity that the generator could produce should the need for power arise. It is common to have a 15 to 20 percent spinning reserve to provide reliable service in case some generating units drop off line, break down, or customer demand suddenly surges.
2) spinning reserve, non-spinning reserve
Spinning reserve is any back-up energy production capacity which is can be made available to a transmission system with ten (10) minutes' notice and can operate continuously for at least two hours once it is brought online.
Non-spinning reserve is generating capacity which is capable of being brought online within 10 minutes if it is offline, or interrupted within 10 minutes if it is online, and which is capable of either being operated or interrupted for at least two hours.
Spinning is derived from hydroelectric and combustion turbine terminology. Reserve generator turbines can literally be kept spinning without producing any energy as a way to reduce the length of time required to bring them online when needed.
3)When Generation is lost the immediate power requirement comes from the rotating masses and not by ramping up the input to the prime-mover. Severe frequency deviations and commensurate corrective load shedding occupy the scene. A GT with 20min time to load fully does not qualify to be a good spinning reserve!
4)If the reserve generator turbine is in a state of readiness (for example, as in the case of the steam/gas turbine driven generator: casing temps at 50% depth and 90%depth being within specific TSE(Turbine Stress Evaluator) limits) the load pickup is fast as CVs open up rapidly. Survival mainly assisted by load shedding / islanding arrangements.
Hope this clarifies some part of your query
Best regards