Overview
Category OverviewGenerators are temporary, backup, standby, or primary power systems used to supply electricity when grid power is unavailable, unstable, insufficient, or unsuitable for critical loads. A generator project involves load calculation, fuel supply, starting method, transfer switching, noise control, ventilation, exhaust, grounding, protection, monitoring, maintenance access, and compliance with site conditions.
Power Continuity
Reliable backup power reduces downtime risk for critical facilities and field operations.
System Engineering
Generator projects require coordinated design across electrical, mechanical, and safety systems.
Correct Selection
Correct generator selection depends on load profile, runtime, environment, and duty cycle.
Lifecycle Cost
Low purchase price can create higher lifecycle cost through fuel waste and maintenance.
Product Categories
20 CategoriesThe generator category covers diesel, gasoline, gas, hybrid, inverter, portable, standby, and industrial generator systems, along with all key components and accessories.
Portable Gasoline Generators
Compact fuel-powered units for mobile and temporary power. 2kW–10kW.
Portable Diesel Generators
Mobile diesel units for heavier temporary power demand. 10kW–100kW.
Standby Diesel Generators
Fixed backup generators for automatic emergency power. 20kW–2000kW.
Prime Power Generators
Generator sets designed for long-duration main power use at remote sites.
Industrial Generator Sets
Heavy-duty generator systems for industrial power loads. 100kW–3000kW.
Inverter Generators
Generators delivering cleaner power for sensitive loads. 1kW–8kW.
Silent Generators
Enclosed generator sets designed for lower noise operation in urban sites.
Trailer-Mounted Generators
Towable generator systems for rapid mobile deployment across sites.
Gas Generators
Generator sets using natural gas, LPG, or biogas fuel for cleaner power.
Hybrid Generator Systems
Generator systems integrated with batteries or renewables to reduce fuel use.
Generator Engines
Combustion engines driving alternators. Diesel, gasoline, gas, and dual-fuel.
Alternators
Brushless, AVR, and PMG alternators converting engine rotation into AC power.
Generator Control Panels
Manual panels, auto panels, AMF controllers, and PLC panels for operation.
Automatic Transfer Switches
2P, 3P, 4P ATS panels for automatic backup power changeover.
Synchronization Panels
Genset paralleling panels enabling multiple generators to run in parallel.
Fuel Supply Systems
Day tanks, base tanks, fuel pumps, filters, and piping for generator runtime.
Exhaust & Ventilation
Mufflers, exhaust pipes, louvers, fans, and ducts for safe heat and fume removal.
Generator Enclosures
Silent canopies, weatherproof enclosures, and container units for protection.
Power Distribution Accessories
Cables, plugs, sockets, breakers, and distribution boxes for safe load connection.
Monitoring & Remote O&M
Remote controllers, IoT modules, BMS gateways, and sensors for visibility.
Application Scenarios
12 ScenariosGenerator applications span construction, commercial buildings, data centers, hospitals, telecom, mining, agriculture, events, emergency response, oil and gas, residential, and microgrid projects.
Construction Site Temporary Power
Trailer diesel generators with protected distribution for tools, lighting, pumps, and site offices on changing sites.
Commercial Building Backup
Standby diesel generator with ATS, canopy, exhaust, and monitoring for elevators, pumps, lighting, and IT systems.
Data Center Power Continuity
Standby or parallel generator system with UPS coordination for sensitive loads requiring layered redundancy.
Hospital & Emergency Facility
Redundant standby generators with ATS and strict O&M planning for medical, lighting, HVAC, and life-safety systems.
Telecom Base Station Power
Hybrid generator-battery system with remote monitoring for unmanned, remote, and weather-exposed communication sites.
Mining & Remote Industrial
Prime-rated diesel generator plant with fuel and filtration systems for heavy loads, harsh terrain, and limited grid access.
Agriculture & Irrigation
Diesel generator matched with pump starting characteristics for seasonal loads, outdoor use, and long working hours.
Events & Outdoor Facilities
Silent trailer generators with distribution boxes and cable protection for temporary loads, public safety, and noise limits.
Emergency Rescue & Disaster
Portable or trailer generators with rugged accessories for rapid deployment under uncertain site and weather conditions.
Oil, Gas & Pipeline Operations
Industrial diesel or gas generators with site-specific protection for remote sites, hazardous environments, and continuous loads.
Residential & Small Business
Small standby or inverter generator with transfer protection for lighting, refrigeration, IT, and essential appliances.
Microgrid & Off-Grid Power
Hybrid generator system with battery and energy management control for coordinated generation, storage, and load management.
Solution Frameworks
17 SolutionsTechnical and application scenario solution frameworks covering standby power, prime power, hybrid systems, parallel capacity, noise control, mobile deployment, generator room engineering, remote monitoring, and fuel autonomy.
Standby Power Continuity
Buildings, hospitals, factories, data rooms, public facilities.
Prime Power for Off-Grid Sites
Mines, islands, oilfields, remote plants, field camps.
Hybrid Solar-Generator Systems
Telecom, remote sites, microgrids, off-grid facilities.
Parallel Generator Systems
Data centers, industrial plants, hospitals, large campuses.
Silent & Low-Noise Generators
Commercial buildings, events, residential, urban projects.
Mobile & Temporary Power
Construction, events, repair work, emergency response.
Generator Room Design
Buildings, factories, hospitals, data centers, utility rooms.
Remote Monitoring & O&M
Telecom, remote sites, distributed facilities, rental fleets.
Fuel Autonomy & Storage
Data centers, critical facilities, remote sites, emergency response.
Construction Site Temporary Power
Building sites, infrastructure projects, tunnels, bridges.
Commercial Building Backup Power
Office towers, shopping malls, hotels, mixed-use complexes.
Data Center Backup Power
Colocation, enterprise data centers, edge computing, cloud nodes.
Hospital Emergency Power
Hospitals, clinics, surgical centers, medical campuses.
Telecom Remote Site Power
Cell towers, microwave stations, fiber nodes, remote repeaters.
Mining & Heavy Industry Power
Open-pit mines, underground mines, processing plants, smelters.
Event & Public Activity Power
Concerts, exhibitions, sports events, outdoor festivals.
Disaster Response Emergency Power
Flood zones, earthquake sites, refugee camps, field hospitals.
Selection Guide
Procurement FrameworkSelect generators by load, duty cycle, fuel, environment, transfer method, and lifecycle cost. This guide helps users avoid undersizing, oversizing, fuel mismatch, unsafe deployment, and poor system integration.
Load Assessment
Identify all loads, starting currents, duty cycle, and required reserve margin before sizing.
Fuel & Runtime Planning
Plan fuel type, storage capacity, refueling access, filtration, and runtime assumptions.
Site & Environment
Check altitude, temperature, dust, humidity, and ventilation constraints for derating needs.
Transfer & Integration
Match ATS, breakers, cables, grounding, and load priority design to the generator system.
Generator Planning Calculators
7 ToolsUse calculator tools to estimate generator capacity, runtime, fuel demand, and support system needs before procurement or design. Generator mistakes often come from unclear load, starting current, fuel autonomy, and runtime assumptions.
Generator Capacity Estimator
Estimate the required generator size for connected loads. Helps avoid undersizing, oversizing, and startup failure.
Use CalculatorMotor Starting & Surge Load
Determine whether a generator can support motor, pump, or compressor loads during startup. Assess voltage dip risk.
Use CalculatorFuel Runtime Estimator
Estimate runtime based on fuel tank and expected load profile. Helps judge whether fuel autonomy meets site requirements.
Use CalculatorBackup Load Priority Planner
Identify which loads should be backed up and whether the selected generator capacity is sufficient for each priority tier.
Use CalculatorCable & Voltage Drop Check
Estimate cable voltage drop for generator-to-load runs. Helps reduce overheating, low voltage, and connector mismatch.
Use CalculatorNoise Distance Calculator
Estimate noise level at receiver location. Helps avoid acoustic complaints and unsuitable generator placements.
Use CalculatorHybrid Battery Feasibility
Estimate battery capacity needed for hybrid operation and potential fuel savings from reducing generator runtime.
Use CalculatorIndustry Insights
8 Key PointsGenerator procurement should start from load behavior, not rated power. A generator selected only by headline kW may fail when motor startup, surge demand, or phase imbalance appears on site.
The cheapest generator can become the most expensive system choice. Lifecycle cost should include fuel, downtime, servicing, accessories, testing, transport, and replacement risk.
Backup power reliability depends on the transfer and distribution system. A high-quality generator cannot protect operations if the ATS, breakers, cables, or grounding design is wrong.
Fuel planning is a core engineering issue, not an afterthought. Fuel quality, storage capacity, refueling access, filtration, and runtime assumptions must be planned properly.
Environmental conditions can change real generator performance. Altitude, temperature, dust, humidity, and ventilation constraints can reduce output or shorten equipment life.
Silent operation requires airflow and heat management, not only an enclosure. A silent generator should be selected as an acoustic and thermal system.
Remote monitoring becomes valuable when generators are distributed or unmanned. Monitoring fuel, alarms, runtime, and fault history improves response speed and maintenance planning.
Generator systems should be selected with future expansion in mind. Synchronization, switchgear, space, fuel capacity, and control interfaces should be reserved early.