Details for El Paso Natural Gas Company's First Compressor Transmission Engine

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5135001434

Data

Marker Number 1434
Atlas Number 5135001434
Marker Title El Paso Natural Gas Company's First Compressor Transmission Engine
Index Entry El Paso Natural Gas Company's First Compressor Transmission Engine
Address
City Odessa
County Ector
UTM Zone 13
UTM Easting 747024
UTM Northing 3530516
Subject Codes geology
Marker Year 1970
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Odessa, 42nd St US. Hwy. 385 at Ector County Coliseum.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text A landmark tool in man's conquest of energy. This compressor went into use in Culberson County, Tex., on Oct. 1, 1931, and served until 1969, aiding in the rise of the southwest as an industrial empire. This was the first compressor transmission engine at the number one transmission station of El Paso natural gas company, founded in 1928 by Paul Kayser, a Houston attorney. The pioneer transmission station of the El Paso natural gas company was one of the earliest in the permian basin. A cooper-bessemer type 19, this machine is an 800-horsepower horizontal tandem reciprocating compressor engine. Equipped with two 10 1/4-inch by 24-inch gas compressor cylinders, it weigh about 173,000 pounds. It served under load for 152,064 hours, compressing more than 144 billion cubic feet of natural gas in its working lifetime. It conveyed production from fields at Jal, N. M., and in Winkler County, Tex., to city of El Paso and southern New Mexico and Arizona. It was the first machine of its kind in a system that expanded into 22,000 miles of forwarding lines furnishing low-cost energy for industries and households in eleven western states.

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