MAN decided to take the risk. In the afternoon of 20 November 1902, Berlant sent the following telegram to Augsburg: “My compliments to yesterdays order confirmation received from tramline administration – letter of Komerowskaja will be sent this evening – Berlant”. MAN Augsburg had secured the first diesel engine bulk order: four diesel engines of the DM4x100 type, each with an output of 400 HP at a speed of 160 rpm. The engines had a 45 cm bore and a piston stroke of 68 cm, an average piston speed of 3.6 m/sec and a mean effective pressure of 3.6 bar. As only one and two-cylinder engines had until then been produced in Augsburg, each engine unit consisted of two attached two-cylinder engines. Delivery of the four engines was effected to Kiev during the period from August 1903 to February 1904. The sales price of the four generator sets was approx. 854.000 Mark and the total weight amounted to about 275 tons, some 69 tons per engine.
As from 12 May 1904, the new diesel engine power plant supplied electrical energy for the municipal trams. It proved that the annual saving in the operating costs amounted to over 200 000 Mark as compared to the previous steam engines.
Already after quite a short time, the Kiev municipal tramline administration was very satisfied with the engine operation and ordered two further diesel engines of the same type and output in 1906 in order to extend the “Alexandrowskaja” power plant to 2 400 HP. Delivery of the generator sets was carried out in spring 1907. Further proof of the great customer satisfaction was that Kiev was content with a shorter guarantee period for this follow-up order so that the warranty time for all six engines expired more or less at the same time.
Years later, Kiev decided to build a second power plant, “Lukianowska“, for which MAN once again delivered four DM4x100 engines with a total output 1 600 HP in 1910 and 1911. Already in October 1912, resp. February 1913, two further MAN engines of the CL80 type, with an output of 600 HP each, were ordered for the extension of the “Lukianowska“ power plant. Concerned were horizontal, double-acting two-cylinder engines.
The Kiev engines, which were delivered last, were running until 1955, when they were finally disassembled and scrapped – some of them after a long service life of 51 years!
The two power plants in Kiev with their diesel GenSets became notable reference plants, which were frequently visited by customer delegations and trade journalists from all over the world. At that time, Kiev had developed into some kind of diesel engine place of pilgrimage and, as a visible witness for the reliability of the new technology, made a valuable contribution to the diesel engines’ worldwide triumphant march. The latest stage of this story of success is the Honduras power plant.
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