phemens
Oct 04, 2017Explorer
Question on inverter/converter setup
I apologize if this has been covered to death elsewhere, it wasn’t obvious to me, so I’ll ask the questions and feel free to chastise me as warranted ;)
I’ll be taking possession of a used 5er in a couple of weeks, so i’m Making my list of projects I want to tackle. In my current setup, I have a 2000 watt pure sine inverter connected to 4 T-125 batteries (yes, with 4/0 wiring throughout). When I turn on the inverter, I plug in the shore power cord, and cut the breaker for the converter, works fine, no issues. We dry camp 95% of the time.
In the new rig, I am thinking of going with AGMs, which may require or warrant changing out the stock converter. At the same time, i’m wondering if it would be worthwhile to go with a combined unit for the converter & inverter. I plan on having a minimum of 600 amp hrs in battery bank, along with at least 750 watts of solar.
Bear with me here, I sometimes have trouble grasping the concepts. If I understand correctly, the combined unit would automatically switch to the inverter to power all the RV 120v, correct? I’m assuming it’s smart enough to cut out the converter function, so that would be one less thing to have to do in my current set up (in addition to plugging in the shore cord to the inverter and turning on/off the inverter).
Questions:
1. what do you do about the fridge/hot water/etc, do you manually set it to LP when the inverter kicks in or when you know you’ll be dry camping?
2. Do you leave the inverter to run all the time - do you worry about any parasitic draw or is there a way to simply disable the inverter when I want?
3. How easy is it to install - other than a simple swap of the existing converter to the new dual unit, any other work to do?
4. Recommended units? Looking for something that could support AGM charge profile (ideally lithium if ever I go that route), and at least 2000w pure sine.
5. Are there any units that also incorporate a solar charge controller. Looking for around 60 amps MPPT. Would it be better to have separate units/ any advantage to combining?
Thanks!
I’ll be taking possession of a used 5er in a couple of weeks, so i’m Making my list of projects I want to tackle. In my current setup, I have a 2000 watt pure sine inverter connected to 4 T-125 batteries (yes, with 4/0 wiring throughout). When I turn on the inverter, I plug in the shore power cord, and cut the breaker for the converter, works fine, no issues. We dry camp 95% of the time.
In the new rig, I am thinking of going with AGMs, which may require or warrant changing out the stock converter. At the same time, i’m wondering if it would be worthwhile to go with a combined unit for the converter & inverter. I plan on having a minimum of 600 amp hrs in battery bank, along with at least 750 watts of solar.
Bear with me here, I sometimes have trouble grasping the concepts. If I understand correctly, the combined unit would automatically switch to the inverter to power all the RV 120v, correct? I’m assuming it’s smart enough to cut out the converter function, so that would be one less thing to have to do in my current set up (in addition to plugging in the shore cord to the inverter and turning on/off the inverter).
Questions:
1. what do you do about the fridge/hot water/etc, do you manually set it to LP when the inverter kicks in or when you know you’ll be dry camping?
2. Do you leave the inverter to run all the time - do you worry about any parasitic draw or is there a way to simply disable the inverter when I want?
3. How easy is it to install - other than a simple swap of the existing converter to the new dual unit, any other work to do?
4. Recommended units? Looking for something that could support AGM charge profile (ideally lithium if ever I go that route), and at least 2000w pure sine.
5. Are there any units that also incorporate a solar charge controller. Looking for around 60 amps MPPT. Would it be better to have separate units/ any advantage to combining?
Thanks!