Slava,
If you are talking about systems that use a lineup with a diesel engine, a generator, and an electric motor in a single drive line, then the systems I am famliar with use some type of clutch at each coupling. So when the electric motor is driving the generator the engine is uncoupled and when the engine is driving the motor is uncoupled. I know there may be some other types out there, but this is what I am familiar with.
As a general comment on this subject
Load testing of standby generators is becoming, at least in our area, an increasingly discussed topic. The usual options have been to either install a permanent load bank, from partial to full load rating, or the regularly contract a load bank test with a portable unit. Some facilites are designed where there is opportunity to use facility loads to load test without disrupting operations, but these are pretty rare.
The single biggest factor driving these changes are emissions reduction requirments for the prme movers. To meet the upcoming tier levels for allowable emissions there have been significant changes to the diesel engines. And one of the primary operational "paybacks" for these changes is that newer engines from most all manufacturers don't like running lightly loaded. Add aftertreatment for PM and NOx reduction to this, and yes, even on standby units it will be required, and the ability to run unloaded or lightly loaded for any length of time is dramatically reduced.
So customers are looking for options, and load banks are expensive and hard to finacially justify in a lot of cases. And portable load bank testing usually introduces system outages and interference with operations as when installed no one hardly ever makes accomadations for future testing.
One recent development in our area, and several California utilites are doing similar programs, is Demand Response programs where the utility is providing incentives for customers to make their standby units parallel capable so that in power emergencies the utility can dispatch these standby units to parallel with the grid and export power, or the customer can choose to seperate and remove his load from the system in a closed transition. A great side benefit of these programs is that the required regular testing by the utility allows the customer to load test his unit against the grid.
I personally think these types of programs are of great benefit to both customers and utilities, the downside is that it does reduce some of our service business, but it is hard to watch thousands of BTU's go do nothing when the power produced could have some beneift somewhere. And the installed generators in these programs actually have fewer problems because there are being run loaded and regularly. It also better tests the generator ends and the controls as we have the opportunity to go into a lagging power factor and also supply VARs into the system.
Great topic, thanks for starting it.
Mike LeClair
Service Engineer
Hawthorne Power Systems