A little clarification....
Chances are, if the power unit is diesel, the alternator head will be 4 pole simply because most diesels, with the exception of small, single cylinder ones like Hatz are designed to turn an optimum rpm of 1800 for fuel efficiency, torque rise and longevity....
That's right, only if it's a multi cylinder diesel, have yet to see a single cyl diesel 4 pole genset. You mention hatz, that may of been one of the first diesel whiz bangers, but now there are countless 1 cyl diesel, air cooled 3600 rpm units out, almost exclusively from china.
Seems multi cylinder is needed to to hold hz in spec at lower rpms regardless of hp, which I believe is due to the greater spinning mass of the heavier engine (flywheel effect)
Whereas, gasoline engines because of their design, are more efficient at a higher rpm, thus a 2 pole head and 3600 rpm.
No argument here, except the effieciency part, especially when compared to diesel. They just don't make their HP till they get into the higher rpms
Understand, an alternator (in a standby unit) don't need to turn 1800 or 3600 rpm to produce power. On the contrary. The alternator will produce useable power at a lower or higher RPM, it's just that the Hz (hertz) won't be 60 cycles.
Mute point cause you have to maintain hz within ~5% I believe ?
...and it's not about horsepower when driving an alternator head, it's about torque because as the load increases, so does the resistance to rotation of the armature. Torque is the force necessary to overcome that resistance, not horsepower, which is why companies that build standby units dont blow about horsepower because horsepower means very little,
This is an area I'm not well versed in, but from my observation every generator that I have read the specs on holds to that 2 hp per kw rule.
From little 3kw disposables to large 30-50 kw units. I don't completely understand all the forces going on but it's obvious hp does play a critical and predictable role.
The exception would be a coupled alternator like a Winco where a gearbox increases the PTO speed from 540 to the required alternator armature speed, 1800 or 3600 as the case may be.
I won't get into inverter units because it will just muddy the water, suffice to say that an inverter unit capable of providing standby power in sufficient quantity to power a whole house or farm operation is out of the reach of most folks, me included.