In 1901 there were seven boilers powering a variety of Willans engines and Compton dynamos. There was also a Ferranti engineto a British-Schuckert dynamo of 300 kW capacity to support tramway load. By 1923 the plant at Southampton power station comprised 1 × 1,500 kW, 1 × 3,000 kW and 1 × 5,000 kW
turbo-alternators producing
alternating current. There was also 1 × 1,260 kW turbo-alternator and 1 × 500 kW and 2 × 1,000 kW reciprocating engines producing
direct current. All these machines were fed with steam at up to 274,000 pounds per hour. The maximum load on the system was 6,824 kW and in 1923 there were 15,747 consumers connected. • Steam plant: nine
Babcock and Wilcox coal-fired boilers: • Six low pressure LP (280,000 lb/hr, 220
psig, 750 °F) (35.3 kg/s, 15.2
bar, 399 °C) boilers • Three high pressure HP (576,000 lb/hr, 425 psig, 820 °F) (72.6 kg/s, 29.3 bar, 438 °C) boilers. Cooling was by seawater. • Generating plant • One 7 MW
Metropolitan-Vickers LP turbo-alternator • One 6 MW
Parsons LP turbo-alternator • One 10 MW Fraser & Chalmers - GEC LP turbo-alternator • One 15 MW Fraser & Chalmers - GEC LP turbo-alternator • Two 25 MW Parsons HP turbo-alternators == Nationalisation ==