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[GMCnet] Converter, charger, inverter stuff [message #258539] |
Mon, 11 August 2014 20:28 |
glwgmc
Messages: 1014 Registered: June 2004
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Hi Mark,
Thanks for your suggestions. There is a presentation that I give at GMCWS and other clubs on how to install and properly wire for the 460 amp hour battery bank that is in the Royale that can be downloaded for free from my web site jerrywork.com. The battery cables are all 00 size and terminated with electro soldered connectors. The four six volt batteries are all properly balanced with the same length cables throughout. The cable runs from the battery bank to the inverter is 2', from the converter charger to the battery bank is also 2' so I doubt voltage drop in the cables play much of a role here, but they could.
I suspect the failing converter charger is at the bottom of this issue, but I have yet to postulate exactly how. The new converter charger will be here tomorrow and I can eliminate one factor and see what, if any, effect that has on the fully charged state of the battery bank. When we get home I will replace the inverter and see if the new one, with fully charged batteries, can properly drive the inverter microwave. This microwave has a power requirement of 12.7 amps, 1460 watts when running at full power. The nature of inverter microwave technology is that it modulates the power output - power draw - from the magnetron. A regular microwave only modulates the time the microwave runs at full power so anytime this one is running at less than full power it should be drawing less than 1460 watts. The replacement inverter is rated at 2000 watts for 5 minutes, 1800 watts continuous and 3600 watts instantaneous. Time will tell.
Jerry
Jerry Work
The Dovetail Joint
Fine furniture designed & hand crafted
in the 1907 former Masonic Temple building
in historic Kerby, OR
http://jerrywork.com
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Message: 9
Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2014 17:15:55 -0600
From: Mark
Subject: Re: [GMCnet] Converter, charger, inverter stuff
To: gmclist@temp.gmcnet.org
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Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
The first thing I'd suggest you do is to let us know how many feet of what size wire is powering your inverter (both to the battery and to the
ground)?
To feed my own 1000 watt (about 7 amps at 120VAC) I needed to run about 30' of 1/0 and 2/0 cable. The #4 that my coach was wired with originally fell
FAR short of being able to power the inverter at full song. Inverters are notoriously finicky about having a very solid DC input, and dropping just a
volt will normally be enough to cause them to error out. FWIW, the 1000 watt inverter is enough to run the antique microwave in my coach, so I'm in
no big hurry to replace it.
There's no doubt that if your house batteries were not fully charged (due to the failing PD converter) your inverter also wouldn't be happy...
If you can't (or don't want to...) measure the size and length of your inverter wiring, you could just throw a voltmeter on the DC input when you're
trying to fire up the microwave... if the voltage is dropping much, you've found the problem. A further check would be to do the same test at the
house batteries to see if they're sagging under the load as well. FWIW, I stuck with a 1000 watt inverter because I knew that anything that drew more
current than that would discharge my two house batteries in VERY short order. I figure I sized the one I have for the maximum reasonable load
(microwave or vacuum cleaner), which should also keep the idling current to a minimum.
--
Mark Hickey
Mesa, AZ
1978 Royale Center Kitchen
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Jerry & Sharon Work
78 Royale
Kerby, OR
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