I Think that is worth while to look back at the OP's original question:
"HamburgerHelper (Electrical)
(OP)
5 Apr 18 13:28
I have thought about this for awhile and I don't understand it. So, let's say you have generation spread out over a large region and there is a disturbance in the system that causes one of the generators to be at a lower or high frequency than the rest of the generators in the system and the controls don't work to bring that generator back up to normal frequency. What happens? I have a hard time understanding this because in my mind if a generator is operating at a different frequency than the rest of the system, that generator or island around the generator is effectively isolated from the rest of the system from a power flow perspective. The rest of the grid is going to try to motor or add generation to it as the phase angle of the different frequency generation slips around the rest of the grid. I just have a hard time grasping why a generator can operate for example at 59 hz while the rest of the grid is humming along at 60 hz. "
HH has put a meaningful question, but with the wrong assumptions. Namely that there could be a frequency deviation between different points in a grid. That question has led to a confused philosophical discussion where waveforms, generator slip and pole angles, distorted wave-forms and non-standard (except for what may happen in protections) frequency measurement methods have been mixed into the brew. All that has not served any good. Rather, it has made otherwise perfectly intelligent individuals throw reality over board and introduce etheric and nonsense concepts. The question about frequency is measured has been put several times and there has not been any definitive answer. There is a simple answer, but that has been abandoned, which has not made the thread any clearer.
Some guys has mentioned that this thread is valuable. Yes, perhaps if you leave the original question and introduce a lot of exceptions, like generator speed, islanding, measurement techniques that may be necessary in certain protections and other things. But when it comes to the question if there can be a frequency difference in a connected grid - it has only caused confusion, hypertension and animosity.
ScottyUK did put a good end to the "discussion". Let it stay there.
Gunnar Englund
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Half full - Half empty? I don't mind. It's what in it that counts.