โMar-09-2015 08:47 AM
โMar-10-2015 05:45 PM
โMar-10-2015 05:07 PM
โMar-10-2015 07:27 AM
wnjj wrote:KD4UPL wrote:
The neutral doesn't touch the breaker.
No, you probably wouldn't overload the neutral because each gen. would have it's own.
It's still a terrible idea that would not provide 240v power.
The concern is over a shared neutral that may be in the house. Shared neutrals were sometimes used to save wire with the knowledge that the 2 hots were on L1 and L2 so canceled each other's neutral current. If you were to effectively power both in phase, the neutral would carry 2x its rated load.
โMar-10-2015 01:30 AM
โMar-09-2015 10:00 PM
โMar-09-2015 09:15 PM
KD4UPL wrote:
The neutral doesn't touch the breaker.
No, you probably wouldn't overload the neutral because each gen. would have it's own.
It's still a terrible idea that would not provide 240v power.
โMar-09-2015 06:59 PM
โMar-09-2015 06:04 PM
โMar-09-2015 05:04 PM
kaydeejay wrote:
Where did the OP say the neutral would be shared?
Two gens with two neutrals wired to the panel would run all 120V appliances just fine.
It's the 240V stuff that would make it just too complicated and prone to mistakes.
โMar-09-2015 03:56 PM
BurbMan wrote:Where did the OP say the neutral would be shared?
Even 120v circuits....you could have a pair of 12ov circuits wired out phase with a shared neutral...the circuits would work fine powered in this manner, but you would severely overload the neutral with twice the current it was designed for and probably start a fire. As was stated, 220v appliances would likely fry themselves if powered with 2 inputs on the same phase. Plus you would need 2 transfer switches. This is a BAD idea no matter how you slice it.
The Champions are cheap enough, just buy a second one and run the parallel, this way you have one power cource to the panel, even though 22v stuff wont work. If you need power to 220v stuff then you need a bigger generator.
โMar-09-2015 11:02 AM
โMar-09-2015 10:47 AM
โMar-09-2015 10:20 AM
mlts22 wrote:Xantrex Prosine too.
A Victron or Magnum Energy inverter, with two 120VAC sources can easily do the above.
โMar-09-2015 09:57 AM