โOct-09-2017 01:29 PM
โOct-11-2017 10:31 AM
โOct-10-2017 10:13 AM
wa8yxm wrote:
I have both Peak and TRUE RMS meters (RMS is the area "under the curve" that is the area between the sine wave and the base line (0 volts) and that will be the same with your inverter as with mine (True Sine Wave)..
โOct-10-2017 08:24 AM
โOct-10-2017 06:07 AM
road-runner wrote:
This explains why peak-reading meters read low,
โOct-09-2017 10:27 PM
road-runner wrote:I've looked at the output from about a dozen MSW inverters on a scope, and every one of them has a peak voltage in the 140 ballpark, directly proportional to the DC input voltage. This explains why peak-reading meters read low, and microwaves produce less cooking power.
Most better MSW inverters are designed so that the peak voltage is roughly the same as for a sine wave (i.e. about 170 volts) and the duty cycle is such that the rms voltage, and hence power into a resistive load, is also the same.
โOct-09-2017 09:20 PM
I've looked at the output from about a dozen MSW inverters on a scope, and every one of them has a peak voltage in the 140 ballpark, directly proportional to the DC input voltage. This explains why peak-reading meters read low, and microwaves produce less cooking power.
Most better MSW inverters are designed so that the peak voltage is roughly the same as for a sine wave (i.e. about 170 volts) and the duty cycle is such that the rms voltage, and hence power into a resistive load, is also the same.
โOct-09-2017 08:59 PM
โOct-09-2017 05:26 PM
โOct-09-2017 05:11 PM
time2roll wrote:
If the tv works all is fine. Just the flat MSW registering low on the pear-to-peak voltmeter.
Get sine wave or a true RMS meter to read the volts.
โOct-09-2017 05:08 PM
โOct-09-2017 04:23 PM
โOct-09-2017 04:07 PM
โOct-09-2017 03:28 PM
tealboy wrote:
I added a light load and it went to 110 and up to 118 with a medium load so maybe the no load situation was the problem?
โOct-09-2017 02:52 PM