โMar-30-2021 07:14 PM
โApr-01-2021 06:58 AM
SJ-Chris wrote:
Could this be possible?.....
Under my dinette bench seat is the converter. The resettable Converter Breaker is in this compartment also. It has never popped before, but did yesterday for the first time.
I did install in this same compartment (under the dinette bench seat) my solar charge controller and my 2000w pure sine wave inverter.
Someone in these posts, someone mentioned "thermal" and/or heat. Is it possible that the HEAT from the solar charge controller and the HEAT from the 2000w inverter could be making this compartment hot enough to pop the resettable Converter Breaker? My first reaction/thought is "No way". I don't know for a fact, but I'm pretty sure the solar charge controller wasn't really doing much (...the RV batteries were full when it left my house, my friend drove the RV for 4 hours, then plugged in to shore power at a campsite) so it should not have gotten hot at all. It is possible they had the inverter on watching the TV and a DVD (~150w ?). Doesn't seem like that would cause the inverter to heat up much at all.
Do you think I should install a small fan in this compartment under the dinette bench seat to blow hot air out (and pull cooler air in from the coach)? I could put it on a temperature controlled switch so it would only come on when that chamber under the bench seat gets to a certain temp. Necessary or overkill??
Just still thinking, not sure yet what caused that resettable Converter Breaker to pop...
-Chris
โApr-01-2021 05:52 AM
โApr-01-2021 12:01 AM
โMar-31-2021 11:58 AM
SJ-Chris wrote:Copy that. I paid $1550 in 2014 and then did a bunch of testing to confirm the setup and the Phoenix one was brief :B as I wanted to be cool. :C
If I see "30amps" on my battery monitor flowing into my batteries sometime this summer, I'll smile knowing that I paid only $225 for my 500w system and it's generating lots of power for me :C
Realistically though....If I'm in Phoenix in June at noon, there is GONNA be some AC involved where ever I'm at which means plugged in or generator on!! When I was moving my daughter into the dorms at ASU several years ago it was a cool 114 degrees!
โMar-31-2021 11:05 AM
SJ-Chris wrote:
The one in the photo (Converter Main Breaker) has never popped in the ~1.5 years that I've owned the RV. Until yesterday. After feedback here and thinking about it more, I don't see how the solar/inverter install could have caused this since those components are basically hooked up directly to the batteries and not through this breaker.
Thanks!
Chris
โMar-31-2021 10:32 AM
FWC wrote:
I would guess your breakers are tripping at below their rated current, and it is an issue with low quality thermal breakers. This would also explain two apparently unrelated faults, if they are using the same breakers. I can't see from the photo, but is there a manufacturer and part number on the breaker? Not to be rude, but based on the photo of the installation, this does not appear to have been done by a careful professional.
โMar-31-2021 10:22 AM
CA Traveler wrote:
BFL13 Reasonable analysis for warmer temps but designs should include lower temps which raise panel power. Interesting that you didn't again bring up lens or cloud effect. I agree that it's likey a panel CB fault which can be eliminated as it serves no purpose.
For general estimating purposes I use 66% of panel power for 4+ hours. On a clear hot Phoenix sky in June I pushed my loads and got 53A from the controller with 750W panels. But I designed for for cold temps as well.
And it seems likely the OPs 2 problems are unrelated but w/o details who knows?
OP Recommend you replace both CBs with better quality ones if not eliminate the panel CB. Then see if you repro the issues.
โMar-31-2021 10:09 AM
BFL13 wrote:
500w panels aimed at the sun at high noon with a high sun calculation, adjusted for being flat on the roof in March when the sun is only half way up at high noon compared with June's altitude.
500w loses 10% in the heat, so 450W, loses say 3% wiring loss to controller, say 13w loss, so input to the controller is 437w.
Aimed vs flat maybe 13% loss and some for March, WAG is 20%, so 80% of 437 =350w input. Controller is say 95% efficient doing 24-12. so another 5% loss to make output 333W. Say no wiring loss to battery to be generous.
output amps (loads first, battery gets what is left over)
333/12.2v = 27.3 amps
333/ 13.2v= 25.2 amps
333/ 14.2 = 23.5 amps
OP says he sees about 25 amps.
Say it is 21 June at high noon, and panels aimed not flat or he moves South till sun is overhead.
437w input with 5% controller loss (22w) = 415w output so amps output:
415/12.2 = 34 amps
415/ 13.2 = 31.4 amps
415/14.2 = 29.2 amps
OP's 30 amp Tracer is just fine for amps size, and yes, it does clip the amps . I don't know why he had the various breakers fail, but it could not have been too many amps from the controller.
โMar-31-2021 09:57 AM
CA Traveler wrote:
There is no reason for a fuse or CB for 1 or 2 parallel panels as a short will not blow the fuse or damage the panels. A switch can be helpful however.
3 or more parallel panels should be individually fused to protect a shorted panel.
โMar-31-2021 07:38 AM
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