I just hauled the 1 Hp 6 pole induction hydro down to the end of the penstock, and hooked it up. Installed a 7/16 nozzle with 100psi dynamic head(55gpm) I wired the motor for 230vac and opened the nozzle. After a few changes in Caps I got a steady 949 watts into the batteries (17.1A @ 55.5Vdc) with 11uf in delta running 210vac @ 110hz (2200 + slip rpm) 949 watts is 1.27 Hp, there is 3.1 Hp available, so it is running at 41% efficiency water to wire. the motor is running pretty warm, but not hot, I can keep my hand on it.
One thing that I find interesting is the VARs from the caps.
If I put my clamp meter on the power transmission lines it reads 4.17A on each line.
If I put the clamp meter on the leads to the caps it reads 2.86A on each line.
If I put the clamp on the transformer input leads, it reads 2.81A on each line.
The caps are at the transformers up at the house, in delta across the the 3 lines. I havn't tried putting the caps in the Star point at the motor on these turbines yet. I have had good luck with that on other turbines in the past, it usually takes smaller caps, the downside is the caps are at the turbine and need to be protected from the elements.
I was getting 820 watts from the 3hp 4 pole induction motor that was there, same runner (4.72 in pitch dia) Same nozzle. The best power I got was 820 watts with 8uf in delta across the lines. 210vac @ 65Hz (1950 + slip Rpm)
A few weeks ago I had the 20A hydro Breaker trip on the DC side and the turbine ran unloaded with the caps on, I had the bright idea of checking the voltage and my good clamp meter read 1200 Vac for about 2 seconds before it exploded in my hand. The 660vac caps survived, and the transformers and motor got one heck of a Hi-Pot test. The transformer ratio is about 5.5:1 so the 1000 volt rectifier only saw 220 Vac, but the DC breaker had to break 310Vdc (although it probably took half a second to spool up to full voltage) I since replaced the 20A with a 90A.
Dustin