English edit

Etymology edit

load +‎ -ability

Noun edit

loadability (countable and uncountable, plural loadabilities)

  1. The quality or degree of being loadable.
    • 1962 August, “British Railways in 1961—a working loss of £87 million”, in Modern Railways, page 90:
      Merchandise in small consignments, or of poor loadability, or handled in small terminals where costs are high, produces a deficit on direct costs of some £40-50m and an overall loss of £70-80m.
    • 2013, Juha Pyrhonen, Design of Rotating Electrical Machines, page 331:
      First the relation of the machine speed and size and then mechanical, electrical and magnetic loadabilities are studied to find out the performance limits of different machine types.
    • 2016, Hesamoddin Marzooghi, Shariq Riaz, Gregor Verbic, Archie C. Chapman, David J. Hill, “Generic Demand Modelling Considering the Impact of Price-Responsive Users for Future Grid Scenarios”, in arXiv[1]:
      Case studies explore the effect of different levels of DR on performance, loadability and voltage stability of the Australian National Electricity Market in 2020 with the increased penetration of RESs.

Related terms edit