Forum Discussion
- KATOOMExplorer
ol Bombero-JC wrote:
KATOOM wrote:
I guess if you have a portable surge protector for 50 amp and you find yourself at a 30 amp max park then.....you cant use it? If thats the case then this is reason alone for a hardwired one.
"KATOOM" I was impressed by your thoughts on a whole *house* inverter, but no so much by the above!..:R
.
Ya caught me in a moment of stupidity..... Not sure what the heck I was thinking when I posted that. :S - ol_Bombero-JCExplorer
KATOOM wrote:
I guess if you have a portable surge protector for 50 amp and you find yourself at a 30 amp max park then.....you cant use it? If thats the case then this is reason alone for a hardwired one.
"KATOOM" I was impressed by your thoughts on a whole *house* inverter, but no so much by the above!..:R
As other poster indicated - a 50amp PI EMS "protects downward" -
to lower amperage pedestal connections......but a 30amp won't help with a 50amp connection.
"Protection" is the same - whether it's hard wired or portable..;)
. - CA_TravelerExplorer III
rhingst wrote:
Ditto for the hardwired unit. It doesn't connect the rig and the remote displays a fault code.
Some of the posts are why I love my portable Progressive EMS that plugs into the electrical pedestal. I know what I have before I plug the trailer into it. - CA_TravelerExplorer III
KATOOM wrote:
Both the portable and hardwired 50A units work on 20A and 30A.
I guess if you have a portable surge protector for 50 amp and you find yourself at a 30 amp max park then.....you cant use it? If thats the case then this is reason alone for a hardwired one. - KATOOMExplorerI guess if you have a portable surge protector for 50 amp and you find yourself at a 30 amp max park then.....you cant use it? If thats the case then this is reason alone for a hardwired one.
- rhingstExplorerSome of the posts are why I love my portable Progressive EMS that plugs into the electrical pedestal. I know what I have before I plug the trailer into it.
- pianotunaNomad IIIHi CA,
Ty for the charging information. It is good to have "real life" figures. I'll rather rarely be using the unit as a charger.
In testing I did run the water heater, fridge and air conditioner. The remote showed a draw of 335 amps from the battery bank. When I plugged into 120 volt power it did charge at 89 amps for a while, but I did not note the line voltage. I know it was 122 under "no load" or "low load", and drops to 116 when the air and water heater are on.
The remote allows me to "tweak" the inverter so it will go to "sleep" until there is a draw of 5 watts (or what ever number I select--do not know the range yet).
As I have a decent solar system, overhead is not much of an issue for me.
My biggest reason for going to an expensive boost inverter was to allow me to limit shore input power to 15 amps. I often stay outside rural Churches and give them a discount on their tuning fees in exchange for use of their power. But I do not always have access to the shore power breaker box, so I've had to watch my watt meter carefully--and also the voltage.
I will continue to use my OEM shore power cord at RV parks. - CA_TravelerExplorer IIIDon, It will be interesting to see what you discover.
FYI My ME2012 will charge the maximum 100A when there is 120V on it's input terminals. At 116V it charges at 80A. When charging at 80A and above the remote meter indicates 100A. The amps reading is estimated based on the AC input. Both of these are Magnum cost tradeoffs and verified by them.
Your idle draw of 7W is about 13AH day, close to double the ME2012. And you have a 30W no load inverter draw. - avvidclif1ExplorerAfter reading thru all the sales literature (I didn't download the OM) I can find no mention of surge/over/under voltage protection. I did finally find a site that listed the price and choked, $2250.
- pianotunaNomad IIIHi CA,
Yes the brand new MSH3012M 3000 watt model that does boost from the battery bank under heavy loads.
http://www.magnumenergy.com/products/MSH-Mseries.htm
I also purchased the remote to control it.CA Traveler wrote:
Don, A hybird inverter makes sense for you RV usage and will help with limited AC power. It doesn't otherwise help with pedestal problems but your pre checks should eliminate most problems.
Do you have the MSH-M model?
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