โJan-23-2015 11:21 AM
โJan-23-2015 10:23 PM
smkettner wrote:X2
Ahh perfect. 300 watts will serve you fine.
My small inverter I connected behind the breaker/fuse panel. For low wattage you can probably tap into the main 12v battery connection and call it good. Then use a small transfer switch to send power down the branch circuit that powers the convenience plugs. If you have two circuits with outlets you need two transfer switches.
I use 300w Go Power sine wave inverter for this service.
GP 12v 300w $171
Small transfer switch (almost plug and play)
15a switch $50
Way way easier than 3000w ๐
โJan-23-2015 09:08 PM
E&J push'n wipnd wrote:Yes. But that's irrelevant now.
By I/C I take it that would be and Inverter/Converter, all in one?
โJan-23-2015 08:09 PM
โJan-23-2015 05:54 PM
โJan-23-2015 05:37 PM
smkettner wrote:
A 3000 watt 12 volt inverter needs to be wired for 300 amps. Pick an inverter and read the installation manual. With two batteries it would be best to be no more than 1000 watts. What exactly do you need to run? Get the actual input wattage rating. tv, dvd, satellite, laptop, cell phone etc will work fine on 150 watts to 300 watts.
I wired my 2000 watt inverter into just the microwave branch circuit with a transfer switch. Power goes down that one circuit only and never to the converter. I added one convenience outlet for any other item to be plugged in.
Or you can move the converter power connection to get power before your inverter but may require a subpanel or Go pOwer has a transfer switch that breaks out the power for the converter direct from cord or generator only.
If you have a compartment up near the batteries that is where the inverter goes. Then pull 120v wire back to the main panel to connect as needed.
โJan-23-2015 05:22 PM
BFL13 wrote:
"... The distance guestimated would be 15' to 20' or so. I did a cursory search for 100 amps at a 20' run and I got #6 AWG would handle 100 amps at 200'"
Try again. Yipes! ๐ One foot of #4 one way (1 ft pos and 1 ft neg) is more like it.
With four 6s you can run that 100a draw until the batts are about 50% down before they alarm off at 11v loaded. With two 6s, you can run that until they are about 75% SOC (25% down) before the 11v alarm goes off.
12v batts will do a little better before hitting 11v but the secret is AGMs. You can do down to 50% with two AGMs before hitting 11v alarm off. So if you have limited battery space or weight to two batts, and want to run a big invert load, get AGMs.
โJan-23-2015 05:18 PM
E&J push'n wind wrote:smkettner wrote:
How may feet will you be from the battery? You will need minimum 4/0 wire about the size of a garden hose. Four batteries minimum, six+ preferred for 3000 watts.
Combo unit is fine or wire the inverter to provide power after the converter so that you have no issues.
My batteries are in the typical place on the tongue. The distance guestimated would be 15' to 20' or so. I did a cursory search for 100 amps at a 20' run and I got #6 AWG would handle 100 amps at 200'
Right now I've gotta stick with the two batteries I have as I am limited by how much weight I can pull. That's a topic for another thread though. I just have an idea to make it as simple as possible (the operation of it) so even a caveman could do it.
Can you expound on the latter part please? Wiring after the inverter after the converter?
โJan-23-2015 04:54 PM
โJan-23-2015 04:30 PM
E&J push'n wind wrote:smkettner wrote:
or wire the inverter to provide power after the converter so that you have no issues.
Can you expound on this please?
โJan-23-2015 04:21 PM
smkettner wrote:
How may feet will you be from the battery? You will need minimum 4/0 wire about the size of a garden hose. Four batteries minimum, six+ preferred for 3000 watts.
Combo unit is fine or wire the inverter to provide power after the converter so that you have no issues.
โJan-23-2015 04:15 PM
2oldman wrote:E&J push'n wind wrote:If you buy an I/C it's all done automatically.
I would like to somehow have a single switch as a cut-out (if that is possible) so as to "turn off the conver" as the inverter is switched on (a single throw switch that does both?). Is there a way to do what I'm looking for?
If you're sinking big bux into a unit, and preparing for heavy use, an IC has a much better charger than your converter. That way, you really are done.
โJan-23-2015 03:14 PM
โJan-23-2015 03:04 PM
ewarnerusa wrote:
There was no load on it when it faulted. I do believe that others mentioned the bonded neutral something something that might trip up an inverter when I asked about on these forums. All other inverters I have used work this way, just that Samlex one didn't. And the Samlex one worked for directly powering things, just not through the shore power cable route. My solution was to get a different inverter since I decided I need PSW.
โJan-23-2015 02:48 PM
โJan-23-2015 02:40 PM