GDW200P
Protect operations from costly outages with the Pramac GDW200P. Rated at 183.4 kVA prime and 203 kVA standby, it is designed for commercial standby, industrial backup and site power. The set can be matched to the real load, motor-starting demands and operating environment rather than selected on nameplate size alone. The Perkins 1106A-70TAG3 engine and Mecc Alte ECO38 2S4 C alternator form a well-matched mechanical and electrical package for long-term standby or prime-power service. Integrate it with automatic transfer switching, remote monitoring, distribution and site fuel systems to create a complete power solution. Order the standard package or specify a custom build with a stainless-steel canopy, hot-dip galvanised skid base, super-silent enclosure, synchronising controls or an open generator set. Capital Power Systems can assist with load assessment, ATS selection, fuel systems, exhaust, installation, testing and commissioning across Australia.
Download Specification Sheet→- 400/230 V, 50 Hz, three-phase output at 0.8 power factor
- 203 kVA / 162.4 kW ESP and 183.4 kVA / 146.7 kW PRP rating
- Perkins 1106A-70TAG3 1500 rpm water-cooled diesel engine
- Mecc Alte ECO38 2S4 C alternator, IP23, Class H insulation
- 75% PRP fuel consumption: 32.13 L/hr
- Fuel tank/runtime options: 8PFT (350 L) 10.89 h; | MFT-XS (500 L) 15.56 h; | MFT-S (600 L) 18.67 h; | MFT-M (1100 L) 34.24 h; | MFT-L (2200 L) 68.47 h
- Noise pressure: 68 dB(A) canopy @ 7 m
Industry-leading components, fully supported in Australia

Pramac
Pramac is a leading global manufacturer of stationary and mobile power generation equipment, founded in Casole d'Elsa, Tuscany in 1966. Now part of the Generac group, Pramac engineers diesel, petrol and battery energy storage solutions trusted by rental houses, mining sites and emergency services in over 150 countries.
Deep Sea Electronics
Deep Sea Electronics (DSE) has been designing intelligent generator and battery management controllers from Hunmanby, UK since 1975. Their controllers — including the iconic DSE 4520, 6020 and 7320 series — set the global standard for AMF / ATS automation, remote monitoring and over-current protection.
Perkins — Engine
Perkins is a British diesel engine manufacturer (part of Caterpillar Inc. since 1998), with engines in production since 1932 and over 22 million units built. Perkins powers the bulk of industrial-class Pramac generators — the 1100, 1300, 1700, 2200, 2500, and 4000 Series engines have a global service network and a reputation for reliability under continuous and prime-power duty cycles.
Mecc Alte — Alternator
Mecc Alte is the world's largest independent alternator manufacturer, headquartered in Vicenza, Italy since 1947. Their brushless synchronous alternators are renowned for exceptional voltage regulation, high efficiency and long service life — the engineering backbone of countless premium gensets.
- Model
- GDW200P/FNE
- Prime Power RPR
- TBC — refer to datasheet
- Emergency Stand-By Power ESP
- TBC — refer to datasheet
- Continuous power
- 162.4 kW
- Voltage
- 400/230 V
- Phase
- Three-phase
- Frequency
- 50 Hz
- Power factor
- 0.8
- Fuel
- Diesel
- Fuel Tank Size
- 600 L
- Run time @ 75% Load
- TBC — refer to datasheet
- Engine
- Perkins 1106A-70TAG3
- Emission Level
- TBC — refer to datasheet
- Alternator
- Mecc Alte ECO38 2S4 C
- Canopy
- Sound-attenuated, traffic white RAL9016
- Noise @ 7 m
- 68 dB(A) canopy @ 7 m
- Dimensions/weight
- Canopy: 3700 x 1200 x 2052 mm, 2320 kg
- Product type
- stationary diesel generator set
- Standby / ESP output
- 203 kVA / 162.4 kW
- Prime / PRP output
- 183.4 kVA / 146.7 kW
- Engine speed
- 1500 rpm
- Engine cooling
- Water
- Engine cylinders/displacement
- 6 in line; | 7010 cm³
- Aspiration
- Turbocharged
- Governor
- Mechanical
- Gross engine power
- 185.7 kWm ESP; | 168.8 kWm PRP
- Alternator rating
- 220 kVA standby @ 27°C; | 200 kVA continuous @ 40°C
- Alternator efficiency
- 92.7% @ 100% load
- Alternator voltage tolerance
- 1%
- IP protection
- IP23
- Cooling/airflow
- 267 m³/min
- Exhaust gas flow/temp PRP
- 30.37 m³/min; | 487 °C
- Fuel consumption @75% PRP
- 32.13 L/hr
- Fuel consumption @100% PRP
- 40.88 L/hr
- Fuel tank options
- 8PFT 350 L; | MFT-XS 500 L; | MFT-S 600 L; | MFT-M 1100 L; | MFT-L 2200 L
- Runtime @75% PRP
- 8PFT (350 L) 10.89 h; | MFT-XS (500 L) 15.56 h; | MFT-S (600 L) 18.67 h; | MFT-M (1100 L) 34.24 h; | MFT-L (2200 L) 68.47 h
- Electrical
- 12 V battery; | max current 293 A; | nominal current 265 A; | circuit breaker 400 A
- Emissions level
- Non Emission Certified
- Application
- commercial standby, industrial backup and site power
- Item number
- BT181TPA006
Learn more — Generator School
All guides →
Almost every conversation about generator sizing starts with two numbers: kVA and kW. They sound similar, they're closely related, and they're almost always mis-used. The beer-glass analogy below is the fastest way to get them straight in your head — and once you do, every spec sheet in the catalogue suddenly makes sense.

A generator is really three machines bolted together: an engine, an alternator, and a controller. They each do one job, and they all have to talk to each other for the unit to behave properly.

Almost every customer who asks us 'should I get diesel or petrol?' gets the same answer: it depends on the duty. For occasional camp / weekend use under 8 kVA, petrol is cheaper to buy and lighter to move. For anything that has to start reliably after sitting unused — backup, standby, prime-power — diesel wins, almost always.

