Forum Discussion
ependydad
May 04, 2018Explorer
time2roll wrote:ependydad wrote:That is not back feeding. Back feeding generally involves a cord with a male plug at each end. aka dead man's cord or suicide cord.
get rid of the hokey extension cord + backfeeding of camper
Plan looks generally good.
I agree on larger inverter, say 2000 watts, to run any large item that plugs into a normal outlet. (one at a time) Microwave can draw 170 amps BTW. Maybe a little less amps on lithium as voltage sag should be less.
Your transfer switches may need some work. You need switches rated for the full generator power. As shown the generator power goes through a 15 amp switch. Are there two breakers on the generator? What is the rating(s)?
Also the inverter needs to be wired so it does not feed the converter. You can put the 15 amp transfer switches on the branch circuits (outlets only) or do the subpanel to break out inverter vs non-inverter circuits.
Thanks for the clarification on backfeeding. That's what I get for using terms that I don't entirely understand. :B
I ran with this 1000W inverter for a while and understand its limitations. I wouldn't mind a 2000 or 3000W inverter, but I'm thinking about a major upgrade down the road. But, I'm really thinking about one of the Victron solar charger/inverter/charger combo units. We'll see, though.
The transfer switches are misleading on this document. The Xantrex or KISAE 15amp switches are designed to control just a single breaker.
The generator and shore power ATS is already there and is rated for the 50amp service (split phase, blah, blah, terms I don't wholly understand :) ) that the rig already wired for. Nothing changes between that and the camper's distribution box/circuit breakers.
What will change is that each of the breakers (up to 2) that I want supported by the inverter will be wired to the little mini automatic transfer switches.
The subpanel is a future plan, but I'm not ready to go down that road yet. When I get the bigger inverter, I'll definitely do it.
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