โNov-07-2015 11:51 AM
โFeb-25-2016 01:46 PM
Mobile sport wrote:
@ RDMueller So is the Powermax still working good ?
Any problems with it?
โFeb-24-2016 11:15 AM
โFeb-23-2016 06:23 PM
โNov-12-2015 05:38 PM
โNov-12-2015 05:09 PM
BFL13 wrote:
I am confused about the "replace" part. I can see it takes about 900w of AC to "make" 50 amps of DC and over time it would take so many KWH to make so many AH.
Usually we talk about "replacing" after the DC amps are "made" and used through a battery in AH. In that case, you run the battery down by say 100AH and then "replace" that, which takes maybe 110AH.
No way does it take 1.87 to "replace" 1.0 in the battery.
I can see how the watt meter would measure the amount of 120v from gen or shore power to run the charger during a recharge. How do you use it to measure what is drawn from the battery?
โNov-11-2015 11:15 AM
โNov-11-2015 04:08 AM
full_mosey wrote:
.......
I believe the 1.87KWH to replace 1KWH is the net result of all of the efficiencies/losses. So yes, the 84% is applied. I don't see how any of the thermal antics of the charger had any material effect on the 1.87KAW except to extend the time.
Neither the inverter/charger nor the MM-RC remote have any meters. All of the Watts I posted were exclusively from the KAW. All sources and loads passed through the KAW. Perhaps I don't understand what you mean.
Can someone explain how an AH meter at the battery can be accurate without considering battery temperature?
HTH;
John
โNov-10-2015 08:53 PM
โNov-10-2015 07:51 PM
BFL13 wrote:
That Magnum is nice unit with a well-written manual!
On the watts vs amps thing, what about that 84% "charger efficiency" in the spec? Do you apply that?
I see it says it has "active" PF correction, which came up in another thread, where somebody said a converter would have to have that type of PF correction.
I don't know how this works, but since it has PSW, why does it need a True RMS meter to read the voltage? I thought that was to do with MSW.
โNov-09-2015 03:12 PM
โNov-09-2015 02:22 PM
โNov-09-2015 01:41 PM
landyacht318 wrote:
My friend owns the 100 amp adjustable unit.
I'd marked 14.5v and 13.6v unloaded with a piece of tape before the first use.
After the first use these marks on the tape were no longer valid, they had drifted and I had to remark them unloaded and they have remained put since, but there has not been much of a use for it as the project vehicle is misbehaving.
Definitely get a Clamp on DCamMeter, it is so great a tool for seeing what loads are pulling too.
upto 25 amps meter/ counter
The Above link is the most accurate of the 3 watt meters I have tested. I have one on My 40 amp Meanwell powersupply, and a portable one with 45 amp powerpoles on both ends that I use on individual devices, or on My PySchoumacher charger .
I replaced the 12 awg aluminum leads with 8awg tinned marine cable and use 45 amp Anderson Powerpoles, crimped and soldered, and they only get warm passing 40 amps, where the 12awg aluminum leads got hot enough to burn my fingers.
These are nice because they Display
Volts
Amps
Watts
Peak amp
Peak watt
Minimum voltage
Amp hours
Watt hours
Some of them display the amount of time they have been hooked up too. There are well over a dozen different versions sold on Amazon.
No they are not 100% accurate, but the meter linked above could read 0.08 amps accurately, whereas my other 2 would NOT.
They all appeared identical internally. Desoldering the 12awg is simple. Soldering 8awg to the internal shunt and circuit board is more challenging. Getting the 8awg to exit the unit cleanly and not stress the internals is also paramount.
I'd not pass 60 amps continuously though one though.
I cannot vouch for the accuracy of every model/version out there, but it was more accurate than the 100 Amp drok Meter I employed on one project.
But the 12awg stock leads make it less useful. I'd not pass more than 25 amps through those continuously, and one still needs to put a voltmeter right on the battery when charging as there will be considerable voltage drop.
The Nice thing is one can always just turn up the voltage higher to account for voltage drop.
โNov-09-2015 12:50 PM
โNov-09-2015 12:49 PM