โDec-21-2014 02:57 PM
โDec-24-2014 12:12 AM
mena661 wrote:X2jcarlilesiu wrote:Put the inverter/charger close to the batteries and run the 120V wire to wherever you need it to go.
I'm liking the idea of pulling the converter/charger and installing an inverter/charger.
What about my issue with the distance from the batteries to the converter being about 16 feet?
โDec-23-2014 09:36 PM
jcarlilesiu wrote:Put the inverter/charger close to the batteries and run the 120V wire to wherever you need it to go.
I'm liking the idea of pulling the converter/charger and installing an inverter/charger.
What about my issue with the distance from the batteries to the converter being about 16 feet?
โDec-23-2014 09:21 PM
โDec-23-2014 08:52 PM
โDec-23-2014 05:37 PM
โDec-23-2014 02:16 PM
โDec-23-2014 02:09 PM
โDec-23-2014 01:58 PM
โDec-23-2014 01:35 PM
โDec-23-2014 01:11 PM
smkettner wrote:
Yes but you are making it more complex than needed for 300w or less.
โDec-23-2014 12:54 PM
โDec-23-2014 12:36 PM
โDec-23-2014 12:05 PM
BFL13 wrote:
Everybody seems to say you can just fire up the Honda when you need to run the toaster or kettle. Nope! Here, the provincial parks have generator hours from 9-11am and from 6-8pm. In the winter it is dark at 6-8pm so that's out unless you like to go out there in the dark and rain. That leaves 9-11am.
So unless you sleep in, you will want to make your breakfast toast well before 9am and you will want an electric toaster instead of the bread-burning torture rack that goes on the propane stove and sets off the fire alarm, waking everybody up for miles around at 0-dark-thirty.
So it is absolutely vital that you have an inverter to run the electric toaster, and that you have enough juice in the battery bank that morning to run the thing.
โDec-22-2014 04:02 PM
โDec-22-2014 03:45 PM