Gasturb 13 Direct

A 14-stage axial design, but with a trick: the first four rows of blades were made from a titanium-aluminide alloy that United Turbine had licensed from a bankrupt Swiss metallurgy firm. This allowed the compressor to swallow dirty air (paper mills are full of fibrous dust) without eroding the blades for at least 35,000 hours. The distinctive whine of a Gasturb 13 at start-up—a rising, almost mournful howl that peaked at 7,100 rpm—was known as the “Vinter Scream,” after its creator.

Long live Gasturb 13.

Unlike the can-annular or silo designs of competitors, Gasturb 13 used a single annular reverse-flow combustor . Fuel (natural gas or #2 diesel) was injected through 24 nozzles arranged in a ring, with the flame front traveling backward relative to the compressor discharge. This allowed for a longer residence time at lower peak temperatures, drastically cutting NOx emissions to 15 ppm—a miracle for the early 1990s without selective catalytic reduction. The downside: the reverse-flow design created a resonant frequency at 75% load that could shake the entire building. Operators learned to “punch through” that band quickly, accelerating from 74% to 76% in under two seconds, lest the windows shatter. Gasturb 13

When the last Gasturb 13 finally spools down for good—perhaps in a remote Alaskan sawmill or a Nigerian refinery—an engineer will likely pour a cup of coffee, wipe the grease from her hands, and listen to the silence. And she will remember that for a brief, roaring window in industrial history, a flawed, screaming, impossible machine from a failed Swedish company did exactly what was asked of it: it kept the lights on. A 14-stage axial design, but with a trick:

Facing bankruptcy, United Turbine’s chief engineer, Dr. Alena Vinter, made a radical bet. Instead of competing with the American giants (GE and Westinghouse) on pure megawattage, she proposed a for the emerging deregulated power market. The goal was not to run 24/7 for 40 years (the coal plant model), but to cycle daily, follow volatile renewable output, and provide both electricity and process heat to paper mills, refineries, and district heating networks. Long live Gasturb 13

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