Turnkey Power On Wheels: Why Everyone Suddenly Wants One
What "turnkey power on wheels" really means
A turnkey power on wheels system is a complete, mobile electrical generation package that arrives at your site pre-engineered, fully integrated, and ready to produce usable electricity the moment it is hooked up-often with little more than a fuel fill and a control-panel switch. For commercial users, this means procurement, engineering, transport, and commissioning are bundled into a single vendor relationship, so the end-customer essentially "turns the key" and the power flows without needing in-house engineering teams to design and integrate each component. In practice, these systems are commonly built on trailers, skids, or container chassis, and cover everything from trailer-mounted diesel mobile generators to full containerized generator sets for heavy-duty or temporary applications.
Recent industry data show that global demand for mobile and containerized turnkey generator solutions has grown by roughly 13 percent annually since 2022, driven by data centers, construction, and event sectors that need rapid deployment and minimal downtime. By 2025, an estimated 42 percent of medium-size industrial sites in Europe now keep at least one trailer-mounted generator as part of their emergency or temporary backup power strategy, underscoring how "power on wheels" has shifted from niche to standard commercial practice.
Core components of a turnkey power-on-wheels package
A full turnkey power on wheels solution typically includes the generator set, fuel system, controls, and structural platform, all factory-tested and pre-wired so field work is reduced to positioning, connecting to loads, and refueling. Vendors usually bundle auxiliary items such as paralleling switchgear, load-banking capability, and remote-monitoring software, so the customer receives not just moving hardware but a managed power service.
Key elements normally found in a mobile generator package include:
- A diesel or sometimes natural-gas engine sized to site load requirements, often drawn from brands like Cummins, Perkins, or Volvo Penta.
- A matched alternator (for example, Stamford or similar) and integrated control panel with automatic start/stop functions.
- A trailer-mounted or skid-based frame with towing gear, outriggers, and braking or stabilizing systems for safe transport and operation.
- On-board fuel tank, filtration, and fire-suppression or safety systems, depending on power rating and jurisdiction.
- Paralleling hardware and cloud-connected monitoring to allow aggregation of multiple units across sites.
A typical 2025 per-kW price benchmark for a mid-range trailer-mounted diesel generator (100-500 kW class) is around €850-€1,100 per kilowatt when sold as a turnkey, mobile package, versus roughly €600-€750 per kilowatt for a comparable stationary unit without transport or integration. That premium reflects engineering, transport-ready framing, and service layers, but many operators accept it to avoid months of permitting and civil works for a fixed plant. 珧