PRIME - Power Requirements for Installations and Military Encampments. Version 2.1. Maintenance Manual
Abstract
The Army uses prime power - large, mobile generators - in its rear areas to bridge the gap between commercial power and tactical generators. When supplying concentrations of Army units, prime power is less vulnerable than commercial power and demands less fuel and maintenance than tactical generators. The Engineering and Housing Support Center of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers procures, operates, and maintains the Army's prime power equipment. Power Requirements for Installations and Military Encampments (PRIME) is the model that the Center uses to calculate prime-power requirements for selected Army units and facilities in specific-wartime scenarios. Users can operate, understand, and maintain PRIME at a number of levels. An end user can operate PRIME simply by following the instruction on the screen. A more sophisticated user may wish to examine the underlying algorithms. Similarly, we have made it possible for the maintenance programmer to update PRIME periodically by revising only the static data files, without having to revise and recompile any of the executable machine programs. At the next level, a maintenance programmer who wishes to change PRIME can examine the program's source code and revise the program's capabilities by editing and recompiling the source code. Keywords: Electricity; Prime Power; Generators; Mobilization; Tactical generators.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Feb 01, 1990
- Accession Number
- ADA224741
Entities
People
- D. M. Brown
- R. W. Salthouse
Organizations
- LMI