@jrmichler's description is very plausible. Not to mention he's seen it.
Answering
@anorlunda's questions would enable a better educated guess regarding your question.
However much current can flow will flow.
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Shorts in the stator:
A phase to phase fault will be spectacular for the current that can flow into the fault is the sum of the machine's capability and the capability of the source.
A phase to neutral fault will be almost as spectacular.
How much current flows into a winding to ground fault depends on how the machine is grounded.
A solidly grounded machine allows however much current is available from machine and source to flow and will likely be spectacular.
Big central station machines are typically grounded through a resistor that limits ground fault current to a small value that won't make an explosion, ten amps or so.
Once upon a time somebody left a big Crescent wrench inside one of our machines.
When it fell down onto a terminal and grounded a phase the machine tripped. No harm done thanks to the current limiting ground resistor.
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shorts in the rotor
You'll likely not notice until they progress pretty far.
Since they just short out part of the DC electromagnet, there's no pyrotechnics.
They distort the magnetic field causing uneven magnetic attraction between rotor and stator so your vibration instrument readings change with excitation.
Your operators will notice the machine requires more field current than it used to.
The increased vibration is hard on the stator wedges that hold the windings in place. Loose stator windings abrade their insulation.
Here's a writeup by some specialists
http://www.generatortech.com/B-Page2-Theory-Effects.html
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old jim