In order to determine if your starting and loading (SAL) procedure can be enhance, your existing procedure and instrumentation needs to be defined. For example, the vintage of your unit may not have had the essential instrumentation at installation in the 1960s.
I have no experience with AC (I have walked by one). For this vintage GE, without provisions for pre-warming nor the needed TCs to monitor, the SAL instructions was three timelines for cold, warm, and hot, with the definition for each being duration off line. Warming was achieved by slow accelerations (60rpm/m) and a couple sub synchronize speed holds. This method did not provide sufficient warming and a lot of failures occurred.
Most of this vintage was updated with changes to the control system to allow pre warming prior to rolling. The SAL instructions were change to a series of flow charts with metal temperatures from TCs determining when warming was sufficient for varies steps in the SAL ramp. However, the addition of the essential TCs to monitor was not always completed.
As stated in the previous post, the next evolution was to use a computer to monitor the TCs and control the SAL ramp.
Another consideration in reducing the SAL ramp times would be how many such ramps will be made. All temperature changes are cyclic stress on the turbine. If there will only be a few cold starts (once per year), then the stress (temperature ramp rates) can be higher. If the there will be many warm starts, then the stress should be kept lower.
The condition of the shell and rotors should also be a factor in SAL procedure. Turbine steel has a tendency to become brittle with age. The shells and rotors may have minor cracks that higher SAL stress will propagate.
I would think the Company that took over for AC (
would be a good source to assist you. However, there are many turbine consultant companies that would also (like the one I work for).
A word of warning, there are companies that promote a rapid cold startup procedure that will cause damage.