The systems were a cryopump and an electric/water liquid Nitrogen replacement system and it's associated vacuum evaporator and diffusion pumps.
You lost me on this, above my head. (Not your fault)
My only experience as of 3 weeks ago was going to another Campus of ours.
I was trying to Complete a Certification of one of our receive sites.
We Broadcast to the Receive Sites Audio and Video of the Class VTC "Video Teleconference"
A lightning storm came in and shut the Campus down, a previous storm had kicked that Generator out. So we had to force started the Mack Generator. It didn't work until we reset 2 breakers on the Unit.
It usually will senses and automatically come on, but the previous storm kicked the Breakers off, once we reset them, were good to go.
Unfortunately the Voltage only served the hallways, not the classrooms. Which is where my conferencing equipment is located.
I left to Certify another site 60 miles away, only to pull into the parking lot to find out, the power was back on, guess where I went after that?
That is my only experience with a Generator of that size and power, I was taken back by the complexity of the System and controls, the size of the Unit was Daunting.
But, all of that was so cool, I completely enjoyed that experience, I would do it again.
kv