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History of Firsts
| Power generation technology |
| Year |
Event |
1917 |
First major mine-mouth plant -- Windsor Plant, Ohio |
1924 |
First reheat generating unit -- Philo Plant, Ohio |
1929 |
First Triple-compound generating unit -- Philo Plant |
1937 |
First million lb/hr high-pressure boiler (1,250 psi) -- Logan Plant, West Virginia |
1941 |
First very high pressure (2,300 psi), natural-circulation generating unit -- Twin Branch Plant, Indiana |
1949 |
First use of highest-pressure, highest-temperature combination (2,000 psi and 1,050 degrees F. primary and 1,000 degrees F. reheat) -- Twin Branch Plant |
1950 |
First heat rate below 10,000 Btu/kwh -- Philip Sporn Plant, West Virginia |
1957 |
First use of supercritical-pressure steam (4,500 psi) -- Philo Plant |
1957 |
First use of super-high temperature steam (1,150 degrees F.) -- Philo Plant |
1957 |
First use of double-reheat steam -- Philo Plant |
1960 |
First Heat Rate below 9,000 Btu/kwh -- Clinch River Plant, Virginia |
1960 |
First large supercritical pressure generating unit (500 mw, later re-rated to 325 mw) -- Breed Plant, Indiana |
1963 |
First natural draft cooling tower in Western Hemisphere -- Big Sandy Plant, Kentucky |
1966 |
First major combination pumped storage and run-of-the-river hydroelectric development -- Smith Mountain Project, Virginia |
1966 |
First use of control room simulator to train power plant operating personnel -- Cardinal Plant, Ohio |
1968 |
First 1,200-foot stack -- Mitchell Plant (1,206 feet, 367.59 meters), West Virginia |
1973 |
First wide scale, minute-to-minute supervisory system for measuring air quality near coal-fired power plants, transmitting data electronically to computer center (12 networks totaling 65 monitoring stations) |
1976 |
First major research in U.S. on pressurized fluidized bed combustion (PFBC) |
1979 |
First investor owned utility to generate 100 billion kwh in 12-month period |
1981 |
First application of sliding-pressure technique on supercritical-pressure generating unit to maintain uniform efficiency over load range from full to minimal -- Gen. James M. Gavin Plant, Ohio |
1987 |
First steam electric generating unit to operate for 607 consecutive days, a world record established March 13 -- Mountaineer Plant, West Virginia |
1990 |
First combined cycle operation of a PFBC plant in North America -- Tidd PFBC Demonstration Plant, Ohio |
1991 |
First conversion of a nearly completed nuclear plant to coal-fired operation -- Wm. H. Zimmer Generating Station, Ohio |
1992 |
First fossil-fired generating unit in the world to produce 10.6 billion net kwh in a single year -- Wm. H. Zimmer Plant |
| Transmission technology |
Year |
Event |
1917 |
First major mine-mouth power plant, Windsor Plant in West Virginia, and long-distance transmission to load center, Canton, Ohio, 55 miles away |
1920 |
First application of carrier-current telephony to transmission lines for system dispatching |
1926 |
Methods developed for transmission line lightning protection |
1929 |
First high-speed carrier-current relaying |
1929 |
First use of automatic frequency and tie-line load control |
1935 |
First ultra-high-speed (one cycle or 1/60th of a second), high-voltage reclosing circuit breaker (138,000 volts) |
1937 |
First sleet melting of transmission line |
1947 |
First extra-high-voltage (EHV) line testing up to 500,000 volts, Tidd Project in Ohio |
1948 |
First aerial inspection of transmission line |
1951 |
First electronic line relay |
1953 |
First EHV transmission line (energized at 330,000 volts), between Sporn and Kanawha River stations in West Virginia |
1953 |
First hot-line maintenance of EHV line |
1958 |
First 345,000-volt interconnection, AEP System and Commonwealth Edison |
1960 |
First large-scale use of helicopters in transmission line construction |
1961 |
First two-cycle, high-voltage air-blast circuit breaker |
1961 |
First bare-hand maintenance of EHV line |
1961 |
First use of guyed-V aluminum tower for transmission line |
1961 |
First EHV transmission line testing up to 775,000 volts, Apple Grove Project in West Virginia |
1962 |
First two-cycle, 345,000-volt air-blast circuit breaker |
1965 |
First field research in use of sodium as transmission conductor |
1966 |
First use of laser beam to monitor transmission line |
1969 |
First 765,000-volt transmission line, between Baker and Marquis stations in Kentucky and Ohio, respectively |
1969 |
First two-cycle, 765,000-volt air blast circuit breaker |
1971 |
First 765,000-volt interconnection, AEP System and Commonwealth Edison |
1975 |
First 3,000 megavolt-ampere transformer bank, Marysville Station in Ohio |
1976 |
First sustained operation of ultra-high-voltage (UHV) line at 2,000,000 volts, AEP/ASEA UHV Research Center at North Liberty, Indiana |
1978 |
First successful testing of transmission current-limiting device |
1978 |
First utility with 100 high-voltage or extra-high-voltage transmission interconnections |
1979 |
First operation of 765,000-volt station using sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) gas, rather than air, as insulation |
1979 |
First single-phase fault clearing and reclosing of untransposed 765,000-volt transmission line |
1980 |
First application of Static Var System (SVS) to maintain voltage on transmission grid, Beaver Creek Station in Kentucky |
1980 |
First use of microprocessors in substation protective relaying |
1984 |
First live-tank SF6 "puffer" type circuit breaker (765,000-volts), Jefferson Station in Indiana |
1986 |
Nation's highest-capacity transmission network -- more than 2,000 miles of 765,000-volt lines -- in commercial operation |
1991 |
Largest 345,000-volt series capacitor (788 megavolt-amperes) with thyristor control east of Mississippi River, Kanawha River Station in West Virginia |
1994 |
First use of “open loop” shield wire design with gapped insulators on EHV lines to reduce power losses |
1998 |
First Unified Power Flow Controller (UPFC) on transmission system, Inez Station in Kentucky. |
1999 |
First transmission bridge capacitor, Leslie Station in Kentucky |
2000 |
First back-to-back asynchronous voltage-sourced converter, Eagle Pass Station in Texas |
2000 |
First use of 765,000-volt transmission surge arrestors instead of closing resistors in circuit breakers |
2001 |
First dead-tank SF6 circuit breaker (765,000 volts), Orange Station in Ohio |
2006 |
First use of six-conductor phase bundles in U.S. for 765,000-volt line in AEP’s Appalachian service area |
2006 |
First High Temperature Superconducting (HTS) triaxial cable demonstration, Bixby Station in Ohio |
2007 |
First back-to-back HVDC with black start bypass breaker interconnecting AEP Texas and Mexico transmission grids |
2007 |
First Variable Frequency Transformer (VFT) in US and on international border. Second VFT in world. |
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