Tuesday, 25 September 2012

Electrical Interview Question



1. In a three-phase system, the voltages are separated by

A. 45°
B. 90°
C. 120°
D. 180°

Answer: Option C


2. In a three-phase system, when the loads are perfectly balanced, the neutral current is

A. zero
B. one-third of maximum
C. two-thirds of maximum
D. at maximum

Answer: Option A

3. In a -connected source driving a -connected load, the

A. load voltage and line voltage are one-third the source voltage for a given phase
B. load voltage and line voltage are two-thirds the source voltage for a given phase
C. load voltage and line voltage cancel for a given phase
D. load voltage, line voltage, and source phase voltage are all equal for a given phase

Answer: Option D

4. In a certain three-wire Y-connected generator, the phase voltages are 2 kV. The magnitudes of the line voltages are

A. 2,000 V
B. 6,000 V
C. 666 V
D. 3,464 V

Answer: Option D


5. In a -connected source feeding a Y-connected load,

A. each phase voltage equals the difference of the corresponding load voltages
B. each phase voltage equals the corresponding load voltage
C. each phase voltage is one-third the corresponding load voltage
D. each phase voltage is 60° out of phase with the corresponding load voltage

 Answer: Option A


6. In a Y-Y source/load configuration, the

A. phase current, the line current, and the load current are all equal in each phase
B. phase current, the line current, and the load current are 120° out of phase
C. phase current and the line current are in phase, and both are 120° out of phase with the load current
D. line current and the load current are in phase, and both are out of phase with the phase current

Answer: Option A


7. In a Y-connected circuit, the magnitude of each line current is

A. one-third the phase current
B. three times the corresponding phase current
C. equal to the corresponding phase current
D. zero

Answer: Option C


8. A constant load power means a uniform conversion of

A. mechanical to electrical energy
B. electrical to mechanical energy
C. current to voltage
D. voltage to current

Answer: Option B


9. Referring to Problem 3, power consumption is

A. 16 W
B. 160 mW
C. 160 W
D. 3,459 W

Answer: Option C


10. A two-phase generator is connected to two 90 load resistors. Each coil generates 120 V ac. A common neutral line exists. How much current flows through the common neutral line?

A. 1.33 A
B. 1.88 A
C. 2.66 A
D. 1.77 A

Answer: Option D

Saturday, 22 September 2012

21- SUGGESTIONS FOR SUCCESS


21- SUGGESTIONS FOR SUCCESS


1.Marry the right person. This one decision will determine 90% of your happiness or misery.

2. Work at something you enjoy and that’s worthy of your time and talent.

3. Give people more than they expect and do it cheerfully.

4. Become the most positive and enthusiastic person you know.

5. Be forgiving of yourself and others.

6. Be generous.

7. Have a grateful heart.

8. Persistence, persistence, persistence.

9. Discipline yourself to save money on even the most modest salary.

10. Treat everyone you meet like you want to be treated.

11. Commit yourself to constant improvement.

12. Commit yourself to quality.

13. Understand that happiness is not based on possessions, power or prestige, but on relationships with people you love and respect.

14. Be loyal.

15. Be honest.

16. Be a self-starter.

17. Be decisive even if it means you’ll sometimes be wrong.

18. Stop blaming others. Take responsibility for every area of your life.

19. Be bold and courageous. When you look back on your life, you’ll regret the things you didn’t do more than the ones you did.

20. Take good care of those you love.

21. Don’t do anything that wouldn’t make your Mom proud.

Friday, 21 September 2012

ohms law


OHM'S LAW


1. Ohm's Law deals with the relationship between voltage and current in an ideal conductor. This relationship states that:

The potential difference (voltage) across an ideal conductor is proportional to the current through it.

The constant of proportionality is called the "resistance", R.

Ohm's Law is given by:

V = I R
where V is the potential difference between two points which include a resistance R. I is the current flowing through the resistance. For biological work, it is often preferable to use the conductance, g = 1/R; In this form Ohm's Law is:
I = g V


Faraday's Law


Any change in the magnetic environment of a coil of wire will cause a voltage (emf) to be "induced" in the coil. No matter how the change is produced, the voltage will be generated. The change could be produced by changing the magnetic field strength, moving a magnet toward or away from the coil, moving the coil into or out of the magnetic field, rotating the coil relative to the magnet, etc.


Faraday's law is a fundamental relationship which comes from Maxwell's equations. It serves as a succinct summary of the ways a voltage (or emf) may be generated by a changing magnetic environment. The induced emf in a coil is equal to the negative of the rate of change of magnetic flux times the number of turns in the coil. It involves the interaction of charge with magnetic field.



Friday, 14 September 2012

Earth leakage circuit breaker

Earth leakage circuit breaker

An Earth Leakage Circuit Breaker (ELCB) is a safety device used in electrical installations with high earth impedance to prevent shock.

Contents

  • 1 Purpose
  • 2 History
    • 2.1 Types
    • 2.2 Connection
    • 2.3 Operation
  • 3 Advantages
  • 4 Disadvantages
    • 4.1 Earth bypassing
    • 4.2 Nuisance Trips
    • 4.3 Failure to respond
  • 5 See also

Purpose

Many electrical installations have a relatively high earth impedance. This may be due to the use of a local earth rod (TT systems), or to dry local ground conditions.
These installations are dangerous and a safety risk if a live to earth fault current flows. Because earth impedance is high,
  1. not enough current exists to trip a fuse or circuit breaker, so the condition persists uncleared indefinitely
  2. the high impedance earth cannot keep the voltage of all exposed metal to a safe voltage, all such metalwork may rise to close to live conductor voltage.
These dangers can be drastically reduced by the use of an ELCB or Residual-current device (RCD).
The ELCB makes such installations much safer by cutting the power if these dangerous conditions occur. This approach to electrical safety is called EEBAD. In Britain EEBAD domestic installations became standard in the 1950s.
In non-technical terms if a person touches something, typically a metal part on faulty electrical equipment, which is at a significant voltage relative to the earth, electrical current will flow through him/her to the earth. The current that flows is too small to trip an electrical fuse which could disconnect the electricity supply, but can be enough to kill. An ELCB detects even a small current to earth (Earth Leakage) and disconnects the equipment (Circuit Breaker).

History

ELCBs were mainly used on TT earthing systems. Nowadays, ELCBs have been mostly replaced by Residual-current devices (RCDs). However many ELCBs are still in use.
Early ELCBs responded to sinewave fault currents, but not to rectified fault current. Over time, filtering against nuisance trips has also improved. Early ELCBs thus offer a little less safety and higher risk of nuisance trip. The ability to distinguish between a fault condition and non-risk conditions is called discrimination.
ELCB manufacturers include: Legrand, ABB, Siemens AG, Areva T&D, TELEMECANIQUE, Orion Italia, Crabtree, MEM.


Types There are two types of ELCB:
  • voltage operated and,
  • current operated.
Voltage-operated ELCBs were introduced in the early 20th century, and provided a major advance in safety for mains electrical supplies with inadequate earth impedance. v-ELCBs have been in widespread use since then, and many are still in operation.
Current-operated ELCBs are generally known today as RCDs (residual current device). These also protect against earth leakage, though the details and method of operation are different.
When the term ELCB is used it usually means a voltage-operated device. Similar devices that are current operated are called Residual-current devices.

 Connection

The earth circuit is modified when an ELCB is used; the connection to the earth rod is passed through the ELCB by connecting to its two earth terminals. One terminal goes to the installation earth CPC (circuit protective conductor, aka earth wire), and the other to the earth rod (or sometimes other type of earth connection). Thus the earth circuit passes through the ELCB's sense coil.

Operation

An ELCB is a specialised type of latching relay that has a building's incoming mains power connected through its switching contacts so that the ELCB disconnects the power in an earth leakage (unsafe) condition.
The ELCB detects fault currents from live (hot) to the earth (ground) wire within the installation it protects. If sufficient voltage appears across the ELCB's sense coil, it will switch off the power, and remain off until manually reset. An ELCB however, does not sense fault currents from live to any other earthed body.

Advantages

ELCBs have one advantage over RCDs: they are less sensitive to fault conditions, therefore they have less nuisance trips. (This does not mean they always do, as practical performance depends on installation details and the discrimination enhancing filtering in the ELCB.) Therefore by electrically separating cable armour from cable CPC, an ELCB can be arranged to protect against cable damage only, and not trip on faults in downline installations.

Disadvantages

ELCBs have some disadvantages:
  • They do not detect faults that don't pass current through the CPC to the earth rod.
  • They do not allow a single building system to be easily split into multiple sections with independent fault protection, because earthing systems are usually bonded to pipework.
  • They may be tripped by external voltages from something connected to the earthing system such as metal pipes, a TN-S earth or a TN-C-S combined neutral and earth.
  • As with RCDs, electrically leaky appliances such as some water heaters, washing machines and cookers may cause the ELCB to trip.
  • ELCBs introduce additional resistance and an additional point of failure into the earthing system.

Earth bypassing

It is not unusual for ELCB protected installation to have a second unintentional connection to earth somewhere, one that does not pass through the ELCB sense coil. This can occur via metal pipework in contact with the ground, metal structural framework, outdoor appliances in contact with soil, and so on.
When this occurs, fault current may pass to earth without being sensed by the ELCB. Despite this, perhaps counterintuitively, the operation of the ELCB is not compromised. The purpose of the ELCB is to prevent earthed metalwork rising to a dangerous voltage during fault conditions, and the ELCB continues to do this just the same, the ELCB will still cut the power at the same CPC voltage level. (The difference is that higher fault current is then needed to reach this voltage.)

Nuisance Trips

While voltage and current on the earth line is usually fault current from a live wire, this is not always the case, thus there are situations in which an ELCB can nuisance trip.
When an installation has two connections to earth, a nearby high current lightning strike will cause a voltage gradient in the soil, presenting the ELCB sense coil with enough voltage to cause it to trip.
If the installation's earth rod is placed close to the earth rod of a neighbouring building, a high earth leakage current in the other building can raise the local ground potential and cause a voltage difference across the two earths, again tripping the ELCB. Close earth rods are unsuitable for ELCB use for this reason, but in real life such installations are sometimes encountered.
Both RCDs and ELCBs are prone to nuisance trips from normal harmless earth leakage to some degree. On one hand ELCBs are on average older, and hence tend to have less well developed filtering against nuisance trips, and on the other hand ELCBs are inherently immune to some of the causes of false trips RCDs suffer, and are generally less sensitive than RCDs. In practice RCD nuisance trips are much more common.
Another cause of nuisance tripping is due to accumulated or burden currents caused by items with lowered insulation resistance. This may occur due to older equipment, or equipment with heating elements, or even wiring in buildings in the tropics where prolonged damp and rain conditions can cause the insulation resistance to lower due to moisture tracking. If there is a 30 mA protective device in use and there is a 10mA burden from various sources then the unit will trip at 20 mA. The individual items may each be electrically safe but a large number of small burden currents accumulates and reduces the tripping level. This was more a problem in past installations where multiple circuits were protected by a single ELCB.
Heating elements of the tubular form are filled with a very fine powder that can absorb moisture if the element has not be used for some time. In the tropics, this may occur, for example if a clothes drier has not been used for a year or a large water boiler used for coffee etc has been in storage. In such cases, if the unit is allowed to power up without RCD protection then it will normally dry out and successfully pass inspection. This type of problem can be seen even with brand new equipment.

Failure to respond

Some ELCBs do not respond to rectified fault current. This issue is the same in principle with ELCBs and RCDs, but ELCBs are on average much older and specs have improved considerably over the years, so an old ELCB is more likely to have some uncommon fault current waveform that it will not respond to.
With any mechanical device, failures occur, and ELCBs should ideally be tested periodically to ensure they still work.
If either of the earth wires become disconnected from the ELCB, it will no longer trip and the installation will often no longer be properly earthed.

Thursday, 13 September 2012

SOURCES OF ENERGY

SOURCES OF ENERGY


Non RenewablePrimary Energy Source

Coal

                    The major use of coal in electricity generation is as a fuel burnt in the furnace of a large steam generator. The high pressure and temperature steam is then supplied to a turbo-generator which produces the electricity. The overall process is simple but there is a large amount of associated plant and equipment used to optimise the cycle efficiency and minimise environmental pollution.

Fuel Oil

                  The term fuel oil covers a wide range of petroleum products from heavy oil which requires preheating for burning and handling through to a light petroleum fraction similar to kerosene. It is a product of an oil refinery after crude oil has been processed.
Fuel oil contains no (or very little) ash and this makes the furnace design much easier compared to a design for coal fired plant. The combustion of the oil can be completed in a smaller volume resulting in smaller furnace size and lower cost.

              Heavy fuel oil (also known as residual or bunker C) is difficult to use since it has a very high viscosity and must be heated to about 40°C for pumping purposes. It is usually burnt in the furnace of a steam generator which supplies steam to a turbo-generator.


Distillate
               
       Distillate is a lighter fraction of fuel oil having a low viscosity and which may be pumped at ambient temperature. 

        Distillate is used to generate electricity by being burnt in a gas turbine or a reciprocating engine, the output of which drives a generator.

Jet Fuel
 
           Jet fuel (also known as kerosene) is the lightest fraction of fuel oil having the lowest viscosity and which may be pumped at ambient temperature.
Jet fuel is usually burnt in the combustion chamber of a gas turbine (aero-derivative type) which then drives a generator.

Gas
 
          Gas is an important energy resource, which plays an increasingly significant role as a fuel source for electricity generation, industrial processes, business and residential consumers.
The term "gas" usually encompasses:

       Two types of related, naturally occurring gases (natural gas and coal seam methane), both of which contain mainly methane (CH4).
LPG (liquefied petroleum gas)
is one of the petroleum products produced in the oil refining process.


Renewable Primary Energy Sources 

 Solar
         
          Solar systems are powered by energy from the sun. Solar radiation reaching the earth's surface is called insolation and has two components - direct normal insolation (DNI) is that part of the radiation coming directly from the sun (usually 80%) and diffusion insolation is that part that has been scattered by the atmosphere or is reflected off the ground or other surfaces. Systems in which the solar radiation is concentrated use only direct normal insolation.
      
           Insolation is typically given as a power density in kW/m2 and average daily insolation as an energy density in kWh/m2-day. For much of the earth's area, the instantaneous insolation on a surface oriented towards the sun at noon on a very clear day is typically in the range of 0.9 kW/m2 to 1.1 kW / m2. The insolation may be reduced by clouds, atmospheric haze or by the angle of the sun to the surface. It quickly increases in the early morning and just as quickly falls away in the late afternoon and varies throughout the day.
         
           The best information on insolation resource for a particular location is measured data at that location. Direct normal insolation is measured with a pyroheliometer, a device that tracks the sun.
Electricity generation using solar energy is by means of two quite different methods - solar photovoltaic and solar thermal.
       
               Solar photovoltaic systems convert solar radiant energy directly to electricity through the use of solar cells which are typically solid-state semiconductor devices, usually containing silicon. Sunlight striking the solar cell produces an electric current which may be transmitted to the external load. A vast amount of research effort has been expended in recent years in developing solar cells which are cheaper to produce, are more efficient and which can produce more energy than is used in their manufacture.

               Solar thermal technologies convert radiant energy from the sun to thermal energy. All of these technologies include a collector which redirects and concentrates the insolation on to a receiver. In the receiver, the solar energy is absorbed, heating a fluid that powers a heat engine to generate electricity. There are several different arrangements of solar thermal systems incorporating different shapes of collectors and varying mechanisms of heat transfer. Many demonstration plants have been or are currently being performance tested within Australia and throughout the world.

Wind
 
           Wind energy systems convert the wind's kinetic energy into mechanical or electrical energy. The energy flow rate per unit area is proportional to the wind velocity cubed - this means that a doubling of the velocity results in an eight times increase in available power. Hence the economics of a wind power system are extremely sensitive to the wind velocity resource. The wind velocity at a particular location varies with the height above ground level and the nature of the terrain.
          
          The actual amount of energy that can be extracted from the wind is less than the theoretical amount of energy available with the theoretical limit being about 60%. A typical efficiency for a wind turbine is about 40%; that is, about 40% of the power available in the area swept by the wind turbine blades is converted to electricity.
           
            On a global scale, winds result from temperature gradients between the equator and the poles and between the land and seas. On a smaller scale, thermal winds can be generated by local thermal effects. Local factors such as high altitude, unobstructed terrain and natural wind tunnelling features cause some areas to have inherently higher wind speeds. At present, areas with a mean wind speed greater than 6 metres per second are considered suitable for wind energy projects but it is anticipated that improvements in technology will permit areas with lower wind speed to be developed.

           Electricity generation using wind as the energy source uses a wind turbine consisting of a large rotor, a gearbox and a generator. Wind turbine technology has developed significantly is the last 25 years and one of the latest turbines has done away with the gearbox since this was a major cause of failure in some early machines.

           The tendency is to construct wind farms consisting of a number of interconnected turbines in a cluster to achieve an economy of scale. The wind farm must be carefully located so as to prevent objections from residents on the grounds of visual or noise pollution. Care must also be taken in the site selection so as to avoid bird kills, particularly to threatened and/or migratory species.


Water
 
            Water energy systems use the energy contained in the water resource. The energy may be in the form of the potential energy stored in an upper water reservoir which can be released as the water falls to a lower reservoir. It may also be potential energy resulting from the changes in the level of ocean water during tidal cycles.

             Another form of water energy resource is associated with the kinetic and potential energy of ocean waves. The kinetic energy of waves is associated with the velocity of the water mass; the potential energy is associated with the displacement of water above or below the mean sea level. The greatest resource for wave power typically occurs between 40 degrees and 60 degrees latitude in each hemisphere. The west coasts of the United States, Europe, New Zealand and Japan are considered suitable for wave energy extraction.
A hydro-electric plant is used to generate electricity from the potential energy stored in the water. As the water is released from the upper to the lower reservoir it passes through a water turbine which drives a generator. There are numerous hydro-electric schemes throughout the world, with some having a capacity of thousands of megawatts.

              A tidal energy conversion plant typically consists of a tidal basin created by a dam, a turbo-generator and a sluice gate in the dam to allow the tidal flow to enter or leave the tidal basin. Tidal energy using conventional hydro-electric technology has been demonstrated on a large scale.
There are a number of different devices used to generate electricity from ocean waves. One arrangement uses a water oscillation chamber incorporating a Wells turbine. The rise and fall of waves in the chamber cause air in the chamber to pass backwards and forwards through a Wells turbine, thereby generating electricity. The Wells turbine spins in the same direction irrespective of the direction of the air passing through it.

Biomass
 
              Biomass is regenerative organic material used for energy production. Sources for biomass fuel include agricultural and forestry residues and municipal and animal wastes. Bagasse (the waste from the crushing of sugar cane) has been used for many years in the sugar industry as boiler fuel for the generation of steam and electricity for use in the sugar mill during the crushing season. Its use, together with other agricultural/forest wastes, is now being promoted in facilities that operate all year and which, in the non-crush season, generate electricity for sale back to a retailer. Such schemes depend on Government subsidy and/or generous buy back prices for their viability. S
              
                 Biomass has a number of advantages over traditional fossil fuels with its primary advantage being that it is renewable. The growth and combustion cycle of biomass does not increase the atmospheric carbon dioxide level (however, cultivation and harvest of biomass requires the use of fuels that may increase the carbon dioxide level). It is usually a low cost fuel since many biomass sources are agricultural or industrial residues that, if not used for energy production, would result in disposal costs.

                Electricity production from biomass generally uses direct combustion of the biomass in a steam generator which supplies a turbo-generator. Allowance must be made in the design of the materials handling system and the steam generator for the specific properties of the biomass to enable satisfactory plant operation. For example, bagasse, which is the fibrous residue from sugar cane milling, is a light-weight material with a high ash content and demands special consideration in the design stage.
An alternative method is to process the biomass in a gasifier with the gaseous output being burnt in a combined cycle gas turbine plant.

Wednesday, 12 September 2012

India's Hydroelectric Power Plants (100 MW and Greater)


India's Hydroelectric Power Plants (100 MW and Greater)

Power Plant Owner Location Total
Capacity
(MW)
River(s) State
Koyna I-IV Maharashtra SEB Koyna Maharashtra 1,920
Sharavathi KPCL Sharavathi Karnataka 1,035
Dehar BBMB Beas; Satluj Rajasthan    990
Kalinadi Nagjhari KPCL Kalinadi Karnataka    840
Nagarjuna Sagar Andhra Pradesh
Power Generation Corp.
Krishna Andhra Pradesh    810
Idduki Kerala SEB Idduki Kerala    780
Srisailam Right Bank Andhra Pradesh
Power Generation Corp.
Krishna Andhra Pradesh    770
Bhakra Right Bank BBMB Satluj Rajasthan    710
Salal NHPC Chenab Jammu & Kashmir    690
Ranjit Sagar Punjab SEB Ranjit Punjab    600
Upper Indravati OHPC Indravati Orissa    600
Kundah Tamil Nadu SEB Kundah Tamil Nadu    555
Bhakra Left Bank BBMB Satluj Rajasthan    540
Chamera I NHPC Ravi Himachal Pradesh    540
Uri I NHPC Jhelum Jammu & Kashmir    480
Lower Sileru Andhra Pradesh
Power Generation Corp.
Godavari Andhra Pradesh    460
Srisailam Left Bank Andhra Pradesh
Power Generation Corp.
Krishna Andhra Pradesh    450
Ranganadi I NEEPCO Ranganadi;
Dikrong
Arunachal Pradesh    405
Kadampari Tamil Nadu SEB Cauvery Tamil Nadu    400
Koteshwar THDC Bhagirathi Uttar Pradesh    400
Balimela OHPC Machkund Orissa    360
Pong BBMB Beas Himachal Pradesh    360
Upper Kolab OHPC Kolab Orissa    320
Bansagar Madhya Pradesh SEB Sone Madhya Pradesh    315
Hirakud OHPC Mahanadi Orissa    308
Ukai Gujarat SEB Tapti Gujarat    305
Rihand UPJVNL Rihand Uttar Pradesh    300
Sabarigiri Kerala SEB Anathodu; Pamba Kerala    300
Rengali OHPC Brahmani Orissa    250
Chibro UJVNL Yamuna Uttaranchal    240
Kadana Gujarat SEB Mahi Gujarat    240
Upper Sileru Andhra Pradesh
Power Generation Corp.
Godavari Andhra Pradesh    240
Varahi Karnataka Power
Corp. Ltd.
Varahi Karnataka    230
Mukerian Punjab SEB Beas Punjab    207
Kopili NEEPCO Umrong Assam    200
Mettur Tunnel Tamil Nadu SEB Cauvery Tamil Nadu    200
Ramganga UJVNL Ramganga Uttaranchal    198
Baira Siul NHPC Siul Himachal Pradesh    180
Gerusuppa KPCL Sharvathi Karnataka    180
Lower Periyar Kerala SEB Periyar Kerala    180
Rana Pratap Sagar Rajasthan State
Electricity Corp. Ltd.
Chambal Rajasthan    172
Pench Madhya Pradesh SEB Narmada Madhya Pradesh    160
Bhira PSS * Tata Electric Co. n/a Maharashtra    150
Kadra Karnataka Power
Corp. Ltd.
Bethi; Kalinadi Karnataka    150
Chilla UJVNL Ganga Uttaranchal    144
Mahi Bajaj Sagar Rajasthan State
Electricity Corp. Ltd.
Mahi Rajasthan    140
Periyar Tamil Nadu SEB Periyar Tamil Nadu    140
Anandpur Sahib Punjab SEB n/a Punjab    134
Bhira Tata Electric Co. n/a Maharashtra    132
Subernrekha Bihar SEB Subernrekha Jharkhand    130
Upper Sindh Jammu & Kashmir SEB Sindh Jammu & Kashmir    127
Kuttiadi Kerala SEB Kuttiadi Kerala    125
Hasdeobango n/a n/a Chattisgarh    120
Jog KPCL Sharvathi Karnataka    120
Khodri UJVNL Tons Uttaranchal    120
Kodasalli KPCL Kalinadi Karnataka    120
Lower Mettur Tamil Nadu SEB Cauvery Tamil Nadu    120
Sanjay Bhaba Himachal Pradesh SEB Bhaba Khad Himachal Pradesh    120
Tanakpur NHPC Sarda Uttaranchal    120
Gandhi Sagar Madhya Pradesh SEB Chambal Madhya Pradesh    115
Machkund Andhra Pradesh
Power Generation Corp.
Machkund Andhra Pradesh    115
Umiam Meghalaya SEB Umiam Meghalaya    114
Shanan (Uhl I) Punjab SEB Uhl Punjab    110
Loktak I NHPC Leimatak Manipur    105
Lower Jhelum Jammu & Kashmir SEB Jhelum Jammu & Kashmir    105
Kalinadi Supa KPCL Kalinadi Karnataka    100
Kodayar Tamil Nadu SEB Kodayar Tamil Nadu    100
Power Plant Owner River(s) State Total
Capacity
(MW)
Location


India's Largest Windpower Facilities (10 MW and Greater)
Power Plant Owner Location Total
Capacity
(MWe)
City State
Vankusawade Wind Park Suzlon Energy Ltd. Satara Dist. Maharashtra 259
Cape Comorim Aban Lloyd Chiles
Offshore Ltd.
Cape Comorim Tamil Nadu   33
Kayathar Subhash Subhash Ltd. Kayathar Tamil Nadu   30
Ramakkalmedu Subhash Ltd. Ramakkalmedu Kerala   25
Muppandal Wind Muppandal Wind Farm Muppandal Tamil Nadu   22
Gujdimangalam Gujdimangalam Wind Farm Gujdimangalam Tamil Nadu   21
Puthlur RCI Wescare (India) Ltd. Puthlur Andhra Pradesh   20
Lamda Danida Danida India Ltd. Lamda Gujarat   15
Chennai Mohan Mohan Breweries
& Distilleries Ltd.
Chennai Tamil Nadu   15
Jamgudrani MP MP Windfarms Ltd. Dewas Madhya Pradesh   14
Jogmatti BSES BSES Ltd. Chitradurga Dist. Karnataka   14
Perungudi Newam Newam Power
Company Ltd.
Perungudi Tamil Nadu   12
Kethanur Wind Farm Kethanur Wind Farm Kethanur Tamil Nadu   11
Hyderabad APSRTC Andhra Pradesh State
Rapid Transit Corp.
Hyderabad Andhra Pradesh   10
Muppandal Madras Madras Cements Ltd. Muppandal Tamil Nadu   10
Poolavadi Chettinad Chettinad Cement
Corp. Ltd.
Poolavadi Tamil Nadu   10