Unique Almas Generator Engineering Services

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Unique Almas Generator Engineering Services Unique Almas Generator Engineering Services Company works with various brands of Generators for Service installation and Spare parts supply.

With numerous high-level expert local national engineering staff who have got almost 15 years experience to manage the operation and maintenance of diesel generators as well as power plant of various manufacturers (Cummins, Perkins ,caterpillar ,SDMO , Olympian & etc.), This team is complemented by a talented local professional technicians and qualified support staff, UAGES providing timely in-ho

use training that can match the specific skills for the job and ensure employees are fully trained to carry out all work to the updated technology and highest standards. UAGES is maintaining and analyzing the record of each generator respectively at HQ branch and assigned the team for each site. All teams are fully equipped with the tools, equipment and spare parts necessary to ensure prompt and effective service and our quality assurance and control department ensures that all works are performed and documented to the highest standard. We consider our clients as our business partners. Unique Almas helps you with the procurement, repair, installation, and other related works of your system. We create a partnership with you over the lifetime of the unit. Technical support is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week and we provide troubleshooting and advice on queries in order to optimize your operations. Improved efficiency and stability are among the primary benefits of the Unique Almas Control packages; your plant / generator will operate more reliably. Should a failure occur, we are there to help you.

Generator Preventive Maintenance Procedure!!!
05/02/2015

Generator Preventive Maintenance Procedure!!!

Generator Preventive Maintenance

New generator creates electricity directly from heat!!!                                                                 ...
01/02/2015

New generator creates electricity directly from heat!!! A new type of thermionic generator that turns heat or light into electrical energy has been developed by researchers in Germany and the US. The new design overcomes the "space-charge problem" that has plagued previous attempts at developing practical devices. The device is about four times more efficient than previous generators and the new technology could find use in a range of applications including solar power and the harvesting of waste heat.
Thermionic generators convert heat or light into an electric current by using the temperature difference between two metallic plates that are separated by a vacuum. The "hot" plate is heated either by incident light or thermal conduction and this causes electrons to evaporate from its surface. These electrons then condense on the surface of the cold plate. This creates a charge difference between the two plates, which can drive a usable electric current.
Because they convert heat or light directly into electrical energy, thermionic generators have considerable potential for practical applications. If used in coal-fired power stations, for example, thermionic converters would, in principle, be more efficient than steam turbines. Thermionic generators could also be applied to a variety of lower-temperature applications, such as the collection of solar energy or the recycling of waste heat in car engines.
The space-charge problem
While this potential for highly efficient energy conversion has been known since the late 1950s, the practical applications have been severely limited by what is called the space-charge problem. For plates separated by more than about 3–5 μm, the negative charge of the "cloud" of electrons that forms in the gap inhibits subsequent electrons from being emitted from the hot plate. This effectively puts a halt to the flow of electrons between the plates. While reducing the gap between plates would help, making a generator with plates that maintain a separation of less than 3 μm at high temperatures is extremely challenging.
Photograph of the thermionic generator at a high temperature
Hot and cold
Previous efforts to solve the space-charge problem have mainly involved inserting caesium ions into the space between the two plates. The positive ions act to neutralize some of the offending charge, thus allowing more electrons to be released from the hot plate. While this approach has been used in the lightweight TOPAZ nuclear reactors that powered some Soviet satellites, it results in a drop in power output of about 50%.
Now, Jochen Mannhart of the Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research in Stuttgart – along with colleagues at the University of Augsburg and Stanford University – has come up with a new way of solving the space-charge problem by creating an electric field in the space between the plates. This field first accelerates the electrons leaving the hot plate and then slows them down as they approach the cold plate. The charge cloud is therefore moved along and does not repel subsequent electrons – allowing for a continuous current. The field itself is created by a honeycomb-patterned gate with hexagonal holes in it. The electrons are guided through the holes by applying a magnetic field between the plates.
A 40% efficiency could be possible
"Practical thermionic generators have reached efficiencies of about 10%. The theoretical predictions for our thermionic generators reach about 40%," says Mannhart. This figure also incorporates the energy needed to create the electric field.
Mannhart and colleagues believe that commercialization of their design could take a further 5–20 years, depending on whether the application is high temperature or low temperature. For the latter, Mannhart says that further optimization of the converter would be needed.
Nicholas Melosh of Stanford University, who was not involved in this study, describes the work as a "clever new technique" to address the space-charge problem, adding that "while more development still needs to be done, this principle could create new devices to convert waste or solar-generated heat into useful electricity".
Planar triode revival
Neil Fox of the University of Bristol in the UK points out that the new generator has similarities to a planar triode design tested at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the late 1950s. This previous design had suffered from energy loses caused by electron–electron collisions and scattering. "[Mannhart and colleagues] have come up with a rather neat vertical triode structure that seeks to improve on the MIT device, by incorporating beam collimating concepts similar to those used in particle accelerators," explains Fox. "The data presented...show that this magnetic triode is a significant improvement over a closed-spaced diode, but suggests that electron–electron collisions and scattering losses to the gate are still present."
The team is now working to increase the efficiency of its generator design in two ways. First, it is building high-performance converters from existing semiconductor technologies. Second, it is optimizing its electrodes through the use of new materials, especially oxides, and nanotechnology.

Reinventing the generator is a thankless task. Contractors are used to fueling these reliable workhorses of the construc...
01/02/2015

Reinventing the generator is a thankless task. Contractors are used to fueling these reliable workhorses of the construction job site and forgetting about them, at least until they need refueling. But Seattle-based Planetary Power may be attracting new attention to these machines with its still-unreleased solar-powered generator, SUNsparq. The SUNsparq generator uses a proprietary lithium-ion battery system to store solar-thermal power generated by a micro-turbine engine, allowing for uninterrupted power 24/7. Planetary Power recently took the computer-controlled battery system of SUNsparq and paired it with a Perkins 403 diesel engine, while it continues development and testing of SUNsparq.

The result was HyGen, a 60-kW diesel-battery hybrid generator that runs primarily off its battery pack during operation, starting up the diesel engine only to recharge the batteries or when operating under high load. The generator's power management is computer controlled, automatically switching between the diesel engine, the batteries or both, as needed. According to Planetary Power, fuel-cost savings of up to 61% are possible because it is not necessary to run the diesel engine all the time.

"What we're hearing from construction industry folks about using remote generators is that they often have to be over sized because at some point during the job you need 60 kW," says Joe Landon, CEO of Planetary Power. "But if you're running at 20 to 30 kW the rest of the time, you're not getting the most out of it. One of the things we've realized is that off-grid applies to more than we thought. Just the convenience of not having to worry about refueling the tank as often can really help on tight schedules."

Brad Wilson, vice president of operations with demolition and asbestos-abatement contractor KD&S Environmental, Montesano, Wash., says the machine did exactly what it was supposed to do on a job overseeing asbestos abatement during demolition of a high school in Shoreline, Wash. The HyGen generator provided onsite power for a team of 15 to 20 workers.

"It's a generator, it puts out power. The fuel cost was ridiculously low compared to other generators' fuel costs," he says. "The power was cut to the building we were in. The majority of the time in jobs like this we have onsite power, but when we don't, we used to rely on smaller generators. On this job, I needed a lot of power and I needed it now."

Wilson's team ran negative-air machines, work lights and air compressors as well as equipment that draws a great deal of peak power like industrial floor buffers and numerous corded hand tools.

"I think we used 38 gallons [of diesel fuel] in two weeks, and [the HyGen] ran around the clock while we were working," Wilson says. "The nice thing about it is that it tells you how full it is and how much power you're using. There's a full computer screen, not just gauges." Wilson estimates that the HyGen consumed between 0.6 to 0.7 gallon of fuel per hour during the job. But although the rented HyGen performed as needed, Wilson was a bit hesitant about purchasing one for his firm. "If I had a use for it more than a month a year, I would definitely buy one. But we have onsite power often, so it just doesn't pay at the moment."

The price tag for a HyGen runs between $85,000 and $100,000, depending on options, which can be a barrier to entry for some markets. Planetary Power has chosen to market the HyGen to job sites that are remote and hard to reach, where the cost of shipping large amounts of fuel is prohibitive.

"We've found the cost of the HyGen is less of a concern to our customers than actually getting fuel out to the sites," says Landon. He says the firm has interested customers working in extremely remote locations, including towns in northern Alaska and mining operations in the African desert. "Our primary focus is remote sites," he says. "Cellphone towers are one area we are looking at, one generator out in the middle of nowhere that we can monitor remotely."

Landon says Planetary Power is working on a second-generation HyGen that will accept other fuels such as natural gas and propane and could provide outputs up to 100 kW.

"Based on the response we've gotten, particularly at CONEXPO earlier this year, we expect the market for HyGen to grow over the next few years," he says.

Caterpillar introduces new diesel generators!!                                                                          ...
01/02/2015

Caterpillar introduces new diesel generators!! Caterpillar Inc. has launched two new 50 Hz extensions of diesel generator sets that will offer fuel-efficient power nodes, addressing the growing demand for backup power.
The Cat® 3516C-HD diesel generator set is rated at 2750-kVA for critical applications, while the Cat C32 diesel generator set is rated 1250-kVA. Caterpillar’s generator sets are optimized to minimize fuel costs and reduce l**e oil consumption.
The Cat 3516C-HD diesel generator uses a four-stroke turbocharged-after cooled engine platform, ideal for data centers and other applications that require a significant amount of power; the Cat 3516C-HD uses a 25 percent smaller footprint than comparable engines.
The diesel generators also include ACERT technology, allowing maximum performance and efficiency through lower combustion temperatures, reducing emissions and prolonging the life of the generators.

31/01/2015

Advanced Medium Mobile Power Systems - AMMPS This generators cut fuel consumption by as much as 21 percent and free up Soldiers from fuel convoys often targeted by roadside attacks..AMMPS, being fielded by PM MEP in partnership with the Rapid Equipping Force, are overall 50 percent more reliable than their predecessors, greatly reducing maintenance costs and time. Once fully implemented, the new generators are expected to avoid 346,000 hours of maintenance manpower per year.
Ranging in size from 5 kilowatts to 60 kilowatts, AMMPS are 21 percent more fuel-efficient than the systems currently in theater, with greater reliability and a 10 percent reduction in size and weight.

And the good work continues :)
16/01/2015

And the good work continues :)

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12/01/2015

Tomorrow is a big day, hope we get what we want out of it!!!

We are committed!!!
12/01/2015

We are committed!!!

12/01/2015

Getting things done as a team is always fun :)

Our champs at our mini workshop :)
12/01/2015

Our champs at our mini workshop :)

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