Ocker Hill Power Station
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| Ocker Hill Power Station | |
|---|---|
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| Country | England |
| Location | Tipton |
| Coordinates | 52°32′N 2°02′W / 52.54°N 2.03°W |
| Status | Decommissioned |
| Construction began | 1901 |
| Commission date | 1902 |
| Decommission date | 1977 |
| Owners | Midland Electric Corporation (1902–1927) West Midlands Joint Electricity Authority (WMJEA) (1927–1948) British Electricity Authority (1948–1955) Central Electricity Authority (1955–1957) Central Electricity Generating Board (1958–1977) |
| Operator | As owner |
| Cooling towers | 3 |
| Cooling source | Recirculating water |
| Power generation | |
| Units operational | 2 × 34 MW + 2 × 30 MW (steam); 4 × 70 MW (gas turbines) |
| Units decommissioned | All |
| Nameplate capacity | 280 MW (gas turbine) |
Ocker Hill Power Station was situated at Ocker Hill in Tipton, Staffordshire, at a point where the Walsall Canal intersected the L&NWR Wednesbury to Princes End railway line. It was opened in 1902[1] by the Midland Electric Corporation for Power Distribution (MEC)[2] and supplied electricity at 7 kV two phase 50 Hz to much of the Black Country. At the time of its building it was stated by the Stourbridge County Express that it was planned to be the largest power station in England. Although this may have been the original intention, it was never achieved.
The original plant comprised two Ferranti 800 kW reciprocating steam alternators and a 1500 kW Ferranti/Yates and Thom machine. Steam was provide from eight Babcock and Wilcox boilers each has an evaporative capacity of 12,000lb/hr. Because of the rapid advance in the design of steam turbines, no more reciprocating machines were installed, and by 1906 a Willans/Dick Kerr steam turbine had been installed to meet the growing load, the first of fifteen turbines to be installed during the life of the station.
By 1923 the plant comprised 1 × 800 kW and 1 × 1,500 kW reciprocating engines and generators, and 3 × 1,500 kW, 3 × 3,000 kW and 2 × 5,000 kW turbo-alternators, these were supplied from the boiler plant which produced a total of 492,000 lb/hr (62.0 kg/s) of steam.[3] Electricity was generated at 7000 volts, 2-phase, 50 Hz AC, with distribution at 7000, 2700, and 200 volts. In 1923 the station generated 38.858 GWh of electricity, some of this was used in the plant, the total amount sold was 33.482 GWh. The revenue from sales of current was £271,812, this gave a surplus of revenue over expenses of £139,070.[3] In 1928 a new 10,000 kW English Electric turbo alternator set was commissioned.[4]
19 MW of plant was removed from service during 1952/53. [5]
