Overview#
The Cat CG260-12 is a 3 MW (3000 kW) continuous-duty natural gas generator set powered by the CG260 12-cylinder engine with 254.4 liters of total displacement. This is a fundamentally different class of equipment from commercial standby generators -- the CG260-12 is a utility-scale power plant in a single machine.
At 3 MW, the CG260-12 serves utility peaking facilities, large district energy central plants, and major industrial cogeneration installations. A single unit displaces what would require 15-20 commercial standby generators to equal. The medium-voltage output (4160V or 13800V) connects directly into substation and distribution infrastructure.
Utility peaking applications#
Utility peaking is the CG260-12's primary application alongside district energy. Gas-fired peaking generation runs during periods of peak grid demand -- typically summer afternoon hours when air conditioning loads peak -- and is dispatched by the utility or grid operator. At 3 MW, a CG260-12 peaking installation can produce meaningful grid support while operating on pipeline natural gas without the logistics of fuel storage.
The EPA Stationary Spark Ignition certification enables non-emergency operation, which is required for utility-contracted dispatch agreements.
District energy and large-scale CHP#
At 3 MW scale, CHP in district energy systems produces thermal output that can serve significant building loads:
- Jacket water heat recovery -- hot water supply for district heating loops or absorption chilling
- Exhaust heat recovery -- high-temperature exhaust gas heat exchangers for steam or high-temperature hot water
- Total fuel utilization -- well-designed 3 MW CHP systems regularly achieve 70-78% total efficiency
Multiple CG260-12 units installed in parallel provide N+1 redundancy for district energy systems that cannot tolerate single-point generation failures.
Engine scale: 254.4L V12#
The CG260 engine family uses 21.2L per cylinder -- a bore and stroke combination engineered for the torque characteristics and bearing durability required in continuous-duty stationary applications. The 254.4L displacement in 12 cylinders produces the 3 MW output at a lower BMEP than smaller high-speed gas engines, translating directly to extended service intervals and overhaul life.
The 60,000-hour major overhaul interval means a CG260-12 operating at 8,000 hours per year can run for 7+ years between major overhauls -- a fundamental operating cost advantage over higher-speed engines with shorter intervals.
Installation considerations#
At 3 MW, the CG260-12 is a substantial installation project:
- Foundation engineering -- vibration isolation and structural load requirements for a machine of this mass
- Gas supply -- high-flow gas supply with appropriate pressure regulation, confirmed against utility delivery capacity
- Medium-voltage interconnect -- 4160V or 13800V switchgear, metering, and utility interconnect agreement
- Cooling system -- radiator or cooling tower sizing for the thermal rejection of a 3 MW engine
- Environmental permitting -- air quality permits required at this output level in most jurisdictions
Our service experience#
MW-class gas engines require a fully structured asset management program, not a standard preventive maintenance schedule. Oil analysis, cylinder pressure analysis, vibration trending, and coolant analysis should be on regular intervals. At this scale, a service contract with trained Cat dealer technicians is standard practice. Lead times for major overhaul parts should be confirmed well before the scheduled interval.


