โSep-17-2017 08:22 AM
โSep-18-2017 06:23 AM
โSep-17-2017 06:11 PM
alaska_av8r wrote:
The air cond ran for quite a while 30 min, and then tripped the breaker again. That doesn't sound right to me, seems like it should have kept running with no problem, and this is with the thermostat set higher at about 74 deg with ambient at 82 deg.
โSep-17-2017 01:03 PM
alaska_av8r wrote:
I have tried digging all over the net to determine amp draws of various appliances and not sure but I found fridge at 2.7amps, water heater element 13amps, and air conditioner 14amps which is essentially 30 amps.
I'm not sure what other various amp demands were going on at the time.
So my question is do those amp numbers sound right and if so, then I guess I am going to have to become a power manager when using the Air conditioner.
How do you guys handle situations like this, or do I have an underlying issue?
thanks
tim
โSep-17-2017 12:18 PM
pianotuna wrote:
Hi,
Circuits are not intended to be run "flat out" so a 30 amp breaker can provide 24 amps on a continuous basis. There are (expensive) ways around this and some less expensive solutions.
I "broke out" the electric water heater and have male and female plugs so I can run the heater on a separate circuit.
The expensive solution is to use a hybrid inverter charger which will draw energy from the battery bank if the load exceeds a certain level (I keep mine at 24 amps). This is called "load support". Of course you can't do that forever--but the water heater cycles on for 15 minutes every four hours once it has reached full temperature.
Be aware that load support is NOT voltage support.
It may well be that with the fridge, water heater and roof air cycled on, that voltage became too low. That would cause the roof air to draw more amps. Then the breaker pops.
โSep-17-2017 12:10 PM
โSep-17-2017 10:03 AM
โSep-17-2017 09:23 AM
โSep-17-2017 08:34 AM