โDec-28-2014 08:33 AM
โDec-31-2014 08:54 AM
โDec-29-2014 06:56 AM
โDec-29-2014 06:54 AM
โDec-29-2014 05:48 AM
Wayne Dohnal wrote:LittleBill wrote:Naturally the voltage would have to be changing for the lights to vary in brightness. The Outback inverter was running off of battery and can change its contribution to the output instantly. The Honda has a ramp-up/ramp-down delay. I'm "assuming" the two devices were in a slow oscillation loop trading off which one carried most of the load. The Outback's output is around 122 volts steady, the Honda's is 128 volts under lighter loads, ramping down to 120 as the load gets heavy. When the Outback inverter sees a higher voltage than it's producing its bi-directional H-bridge turns into an unregulated battery charger. When I realized I had the outputs cross-connected, I broke the connection without any investigation. A couple of factors here aren't present with generators only.
why was the lights changing? was the voltage all over the place?
i would think when they sync, voltage and hertz would sync
i personally think it will either work, or go into overload and protect the inverter.
โDec-28-2014 07:15 PM
LittleBill wrote:Naturally the voltage would have to be changing for the lights to vary in brightness. The Outback inverter was running off of battery and can change its contribution to the output instantly. The Honda has a ramp-up/ramp-down delay. I'm "assuming" the two devices were in a slow oscillation loop trading off which one carried most of the load. The Outback's output is around 122 volts steady, the Honda's is 128 volts under lighter loads, ramping down to 120 as the load gets heavy. When the Outback inverter sees a higher voltage than it's producing its bi-directional H-bridge turns into an unregulated battery charger. When I realized I had the outputs cross-connected, I broke the connection without any investigation. A couple of factors here aren't present with generators only.
why was the lights changing? was the voltage all over the place?
i would think when they sync, voltage and hertz would sync
i personally think it will either work, or go into overload and protect the inverter.
โDec-28-2014 02:44 PM
โDec-28-2014 11:40 AM
Wayne Dohnal wrote:
My best hopefully educated guess, taking absolutely no responsibility if anything is damaged:
1. They will sync.
2. Because of the different design voltages, the Honda will carry all of the load, up to and possibly past its rated continuous load, before the Yamaha begins picking up any of the load.
I wouldn't try it myself unless the value of knowing what happens is more that the cost of at least one new inverter.
As a comment, I have accidentally paralleled my eu2000i with an Outback inverter (during a power outage). Nothing broke, and it took me a while of watching the lights in the house changing brightness until I figured out what was happening.
โDec-28-2014 11:38 AM
โDec-28-2014 11:32 AM
โDec-28-2014 10:48 AM
โDec-28-2014 10:40 AM
โDec-28-2014 10:31 AM
hsteinle wrote:
When I contacted Honda with the same question they said, 'no'. You have to pair units--even Hondas--that are MEANT to be Honda. But, that said--this came from Honda who of course would prefer you use THEIR product, so it might be possible to do this with an 'after market' set up--but I had no luck in finding such.
โDec-28-2014 10:14 AM
โDec-28-2014 09:33 AM