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White Paper on Emergency
Backup Power Generators and Fire Pumps

Backup and Standby Electrical Generators - Equipment
designed to provide emergency electrical power to buildings and equipment in the
event of temporary loss of primary power.
Emergency Backup Fire Pumps ? Equipment designed to
provide temporary water pressure to fire protection systems in the event of loss
of electrical power primary system pumps.
Emergency Backup systems by are definition designed to
operate during the failure of primary systems.
Equipment chosen for this purpose must have the capability
of quickly starting and then operating at or near full capacity for extended
periods of time.
Because this equipment sits idle for extended periods of
time it often requires extra components and specialized maintenance to be able
to fulfill its emergency functions with 100% reliability.
When diesel engines sit for extended periods of time they
suffer from forms or deterioration that are not normally seen in engines used on
a regular basis.
Some important considerations are:
Corrosion both internal and external is much more of an
issue. The additive package in antifreeze deteriorates and breaks down to a
point where the fluid no longer protects the engine and cooling system. Acids
within the cooling system will then destroy radiators, thermostats, water pumps,
cylinder liners, etc.
Often engines, generators, and pumps that are otherwise
very well maintained suffer failures due to the condition of the fuel. An engine
that runs on deteriorated fuel can be hard to start, poor running, create excess
emissions, and can suffer catastrophic failure when required to operate under
full load.
Petroleum fuels begin to break down as soon as the refining
process is completed. Diesel fuel begins noticeable deterioration in 60 to 90
days and this process continues until fuel becomes unusable. As fuel sits, the
aromatics begin to evaporate through the venting system and the heavier
asphaltics and asphaltenes fallout of the fuel settling to the bottom of storage
tanks to form a thick sludge. As the fuel deteriorates, it darkens and loses its
lubricating ability. Diesel is also hygroscopic; it attracts and holds water,
which promotes the formation of gums and varnishes in the fuel system. Water
also promotes the growth of bacteria in fuels and leaches sulfur from the fuel
to form acids that are extremely corrosive to metals, gaskets, and seals within
the engine. Heat and moisture accelerate these processes dramatically. When
engines are run they return hot fuel to the fuel tank, this increases
condensation and production of acids. These acids further accelerate the
oxidation and breakdown of the fuel. As fuel ages it ability to properly
lubricate the fuel system deteriorates significantly, the Cetane rating drops
making the engine harder to start and reducing performance; sludge, gum, and
varnish can plug filters and create injector and combustion chamber carbon
further reducing performance.
A combination of treatment, fuel polishing, and periodic
replacement of stored fuels is required to maintain backup systems at full
readiness.
Fuel polishing is a process using a combination of fuel
treatment and the pumping of the fuel through a multistage filtering device to
remove solids, sediment, bacterial growth, and separated fuel components. This
is generally done on an annual basis; however in some cases twice a year will be
needed.
With treatment and fuel polishing done a regular basis you
will significantly extend the useful life of stored fuels. Eventually however
this fuel will need to be at least partially replaced. We suggest that you can
treat new fuel when delivered and polish annually for three years. After three
years you should either use at least 25% of the stored fuel or have 25% pumped
out and replaced with fresh fuel. The next year you can treat and polish, the
next replace 25%, and so on.
All of the manufacturers of this equipment strongly suggest
a maintenance program that includes several key components that include:
Regular scheduled testing and remediating or replacing
fluids such as lubricating oils, coolant, and fuels.
Antifreeze should be checked for correct pH at least
semi-annually. Depending on results, either a supplement should be added or a
portion of the coolant should be replaced. Cooling systems should be flushed and
the coolant remediated or replaced on a scheduled basis.
Lubricating Oil should be sampled and tested annually for
metals, acids, and coolant. Lubricating Oil should be remediated or replaced
based on test results and manufacturers recommendations.
Fuels should be tested annually and treated to stabilize
accordingly. Fuel should be remediated or replace as necessary to maintain a
clean high quality fuel supply. It is vital to be sure that the entire fuel
system of tanks, day tanks, and engine filtering is adequately maintained.
Regular scheduled running of the equipment where the engine
is brought up to full operating temperature and run under a full load for a
specified period of time.
Engines need to run regularly to maintain readiness. Simply
starting and engine and letting it idle is not sufficient to maintain the engine
or to demonstrate readiness to operate in an emergency.
Full load operation provides many necessary benefits to
this equipment.
First it demonstrates that the power transfer equipment
operates correctly.
Next, generators need full load operation to be sure they
work properly. Generators that are not run under a full load for a stated time
period (usually one hour or longer at least once per month) suffer deterioration
in the magnets and brushes used to generate the electricity. It is not unusual
for a generator not run under a full load regularly to lose up to 50% of its
generating capacity.
With the engines, while they can appear to run fine at idle
or under no-load conditions, they can have many problems under full load.
A simple partially plugged fuel filter will allow an engine
to idle or run up to speed at no-load, however as soon as a load is placed on
this engine it can bog down, stall, or even fail.
Engines need to operate under full load for one to two
hours to completely and evenly heat all the components. This heating flexes and
seats gaskets and seals, allows water and acids to evaporate from motor oil,
cleans and purges fuel injectors and pumps, allows coolant to thoroughly mix and
circulate to protect engine components.
In many cases a ?Catch 22? situation arises where because
of poor operation, engines are not enough to allow problems to be found and
corrected.
If you investigate almost any type industrial equipment
failure, you will find not a single catastrophic failure that happened by
itself, but rather a series of small problems and failures that lead up to the
major catastrophic failure.
If the fuel and engines are properly maintained, there will
be far fewer complaints when the equipment is run on a scheduled basis. As the
equipment is regularly run, it will improve in performance further reducing
complaints.
While it can be politically difficult to get everyone on
board with the need to perform these reasonable required maintenance functions,
it is vital to the safety of students, staff, employees, and the surrounding
communities that this emergency equipment functions as designed in the event of
an emergency.
It is important to consider that the people who complain
the most about scheduled testing are the same ones who will scream the loudest
if there is a failure during a primary power failure.
It may be necessary to schedule some of these load tests
during nights and or weekends to facilitate the switch to generated power
without major disruptions.
In an area that can have severe winter weather with snow
storms and damaging ice buildups it is likely that there will be occasional
primary power interruptions requiring backup power for periods ranging from a
few minutes to several days.
Another consideration is that we live in the post 9-11
world where power grid damage from human sources is a real possibility. Under
those conditions backup power in public facilities may be required for extended
periods. Under those conditions failure of equipment is unthinkable.
Relatively simple and inexpensive maintenance can raise the
reliability and longevity of this equipment significantly.

Send mail to
sales@enertechlabs.com with
questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009
Enertech Labs, Inc.
Last modified:
01/12/09
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