Forum Discussion
greenrvgreen
Aug 02, 2013Explorer
For an inverter that size I would do a hard reassessment of whether I could not afford a conversion to 24V. The reason is that at 3000W you are now moving around a whopping load of amps at 12V, and just the re-wiring to accomodate this may exceed the cost of converting other small items to 24V.
Kettner, with his typical good sense points this out. I have a 2000w Prosine and it operates at the hard edge of 0000 ("four-ought") wiring. In fact, the Prosine manual considers 0000 to be a poor man's workaround, but acceptable. What in the world would be optimum for a 3000 inverter?
Oh, and I too would go for a Victron.
Kettner, with his typical good sense points this out. I have a 2000w Prosine and it operates at the hard edge of 0000 ("four-ought") wiring. In fact, the Prosine manual considers 0000 to be a poor man's workaround, but acceptable. What in the world would be optimum for a 3000 inverter?
Oh, and I too would go for a Victron.
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