Aug-02-2017 04:46 AM
Jan-31-2018 08:04 PM
Jan-31-2018 06:11 PM
SoundGuy wrote:RSD559 wrote:
Priorities. You have priorities. If I'm not plugged in and it's hot. Sorry, no popcorn and no hair dryer. I get cranky when I'm hot. After I broke in my EasyStart last summer, I checked the amps on my EMS display while the A/C was running. It was about 100 that day and the trailer is in the sun. Nothing but the A/C and the inverter was on. It was about 17 amps, if I remember. My A/C is a 15k BTU unit.
The idea of running a $1000+ generator in the heat with a full load and at high RPMs hurts me. I would rather have something that handles the load easily and doesn't have to run hard. Just because you can do it doesn't mean you should.
You seem to be confusing running amps with starting amps ... it's the latter the Micro-Air Easy Start solves but does nothing to lower running amps, nor does the manufacturer ever claim it does. If you want to run lots of "stuff" then of course you'd want to be using a genset capable of handling that running load. Expecting any 2K genset to constantly support a running load well beyond it's amp rating isn't the genset manufacturers' fault nor Micro-Air's, it's yours. :R
Jan-31-2018 04:50 AM
RSD559 wrote:
Priorities. You have priorities. If I'm not plugged in and it's hot. Sorry, no popcorn and no hair dryer. I get cranky when I'm hot. After I broke in my EasyStart last summer, I checked the amps on my EMS display while the A/C was running. It was about 100 that day and the trailer is in the sun. Nothing but the A/C and the inverter was on. It was about 17 amps, if I remember. My A/C is a 15k BTU unit.
The idea of running a $1000+ generator in the heat with a full load and at high RPMs hurts me. I would rather have something that handles the load easily and doesn't have to run hard. Just because you can do it doesn't mean you should.
Jan-30-2018 09:46 PM
Jan-30-2018 09:07 PM
Jan-30-2018 07:36 PM
Jan-30-2018 07:25 PM
Aug-07-2017 01:48 PM
Aug-07-2017 11:04 AM
road-runner wrote:MrWizard wrote:I'm not as surprised as you are. I know from experience that at a few thousand feet altitude a 1,000 watt microwave can max out the eu2000i all by itself. Having said that, however, I believe a lot of RVers don't know about (or forget to) change the fridge to "gas only", or turn off the power converter.
all i'm saying is thats a D**** big MW that won't run on a 2000w generator
unless something else is going on, WH ?
Aug-05-2017 09:07 PM
MrWizard wrote:I'm not as surprised as you are. I know from experience that at a few thousand feet altitude a 1,000 watt microwave can max out the eu2000i all by itself. Having said that, however, I believe a lot of RVers don't know about (or forget to) change the fridge to "gas only", or turn off the power converter.
all i'm saying is thats a D**** big MW that won't run on a 2000w generator
unless something else is going on, WH ?
Aug-05-2017 04:13 PM
Aug-05-2017 01:37 PM
MrWizard wrote:
Any body with a good stand alone inverter big enough for their MW can do the same thing with a 2000w generator
Let the generator charge the batteries at Max available and run the mw from inverter and batteries
Yes you are pulling power from the batteries, this extends the run time recharge by whatever amount of power was pulled from the batteries
Aug-05-2017 12:25 PM
Aug-05-2017 11:22 AM