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Forum Index : Electronics : inverter/charger

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grolly

Regular Member

Joined: 19/05/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 62
Posted: 01:40am 18 Jun 2007
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Hi all... Has anyone had any experience with a "Trace Model SW series 11" (SW3024A ,3000W,24V)inverter/charger?
It has a good blurb on paper, and some good points, as in shareing loads between gen and batteries automatically, and remote gen. starting etc.
Grolly

I have bought the farm...now I AM powering it...
 
grolly

Regular Member

Joined: 19/05/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 62
Posted: 10:28am 27 Jun 2007
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also has anyone had any experence or information on these multi input voltage inverters...
DCAC45/120/2500 and DCAC57/120/2500 DC/AC Inverters.

These Inverters convert a wide DC input voltage to a regulated 120/240vac, using 4 quadrant, crystal controlled, Full H-Bridge, transformer boost technology.
DCAC45/120/2500
Input 27 to 63

Voltage
Output 120/240


I have bought the farm...now I AM powering it...
 
dwyer
Guru

Joined: 19/09/2005
Location: Australia
Posts: 574
Posted: 01:22pm 27 Jun 2007
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hi grolly
where did you find it and this come is off ?
Dwyer the bushman
 
dwyer
Guru

Joined: 19/09/2005
Location: Australia
Posts: 574
Posted: 01:31pm 27 Jun 2007
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Hi grolly
just have alook this webs site www.zahninc.com
ABOUT ZAHN
PRODUCTS
GLOSSARY
PRODUCT LISTING
(By Model No.)

NEWSLETTER
EMAIL US NOW

4133 Courtney Rd. Unit #5
Franksville, WI 53126
Phone: (262) 835-9200
Fax: (262) 835-9201
EMAIL zahn@zahninc.com
www.zahninc.com



Manufacture of:

DC/DC Converter or DC Converters or dc-dc Converter,

Step Up Converter, Step Down Converter

DC Motor Controls or Servo Amplifiers or DC Amplifiers,

Pure DC or Chopper Motor Controls, all by PWM

Click on:

DC/DC Converters
DC/AC Inverters
DC MotorContols (Servo Amplifiers)

Power Supplies



Featuring our DCDC17/330/7000? Step Up Converter
Featuring our DCDC24/12/3000 Step Down Converter

------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------

Copyright 2007 by Zahn Electronics, Inc. All Rights reserved
 
grolly

Regular Member

Joined: 19/05/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 62
Posted: 10:36am 28 Jun 2007
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Hi Dwyer, yes that is the web site I got the pic off, what I was asking was if anyone has had any experence with these type of inverters, whether they are reliable, and do what they say.

at the moment I will be feeding it from a 32 volt DC gen set, AND a 24 volt x 500 amp battery bank and 2 x 24 volt x 760 amp fork batterie banks. the gen set is variable voltage output, max 40 v dc @ 60 amp

This is "at the moment", I have 3 monthe to improve on this situation, or change it...

Grolly
I have bought the farm...now I AM powering it...
 
dwyer
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Joined: 19/09/2005
Location: Australia
Posts: 574
Posted: 11:08am 28 Jun 2007
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Hi Grolly
yes l would like to know about if Zahn inverter are reliable maybe other member Ross might know about it so Ross if you had any work with or knowedge with this type inverter??
Dwyer the bushman
 
dwyer
Guru

Joined: 19/09/2005
Location: Australia
Posts: 574
Posted: 11:39am 28 Jun 2007
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Hi grolly
I had aquick look at Zahn inverter and l copy this information Note, with a sine wave
output current, the peak current coming in from the DC source is a sine squared waveform and will not work well on elecric clock, microwave,dvd or tape player, fax machine also some tv set ,anything appication that design run on pure wave is fine but not on modifild wave.

dwyer the bushman

 
RossW
Guru

Joined: 25/02/2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 495
Posted: 11:41am 28 Jun 2007
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Sorry, no, not familiar with this beasty.

Personally, I would only consider a pure sinewave inverter for my own applications, so whatever you get, check its specs very carefully. See what they rate its "maximum" at, and how long for. Also if they offer an indication of how much overload it can take for how long (eg, my 5KVA inverter can do 6KVA for an hour, at 40 deg C ambient) - if you have this sort of "safety margin" you can probably be reasonably confident with it.
 
grolly

Regular Member

Joined: 19/05/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 62
Posted: 09:04am 02 Jul 2007
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Hi all, what is the difference between Modified Sine Wave and pure sine wave inverters, apart from running a computer, what else will not run?, I am thinking of running the office on a pure sine wave( 1500W/3000w) and the rest of the house on a modified sine wave 4000w/8000w, will this work?
I have bought the farm...now I AM powering it...
 
Highlander

Senior Member

Joined: 03/10/2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 266
Posted: 09:25am 02 Jul 2007
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Hi Grolly,
I'll leave it to Ross or Mega for details, but in a word NO.
Some things will not work at all and others will have their working life greatly reduced.
Have a look at this
http://www.thebackshed.com/Windmill/FORUM1/forum_posts.asp?T ID=375&PN=8




Edited by Highlander 2007-07-03
Central Victorian highlands
 
grolly

Regular Member

Joined: 19/05/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 62
Posted: 10:24am 02 Jul 2007
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Hi Highlander... thanks, don't think I will spend the 1100.00 bucks, and go for a smaller PSW one. What attracted it to me was the 4000w cont/8000w surge... well back to the drawing board....

Grolly
I have bought the farm...now I AM powering it...
 
RossW
Guru

Joined: 25/02/2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 495
Posted: 10:35am 02 Jul 2007
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Yup, as per highlanders diagram, MSW (or "Stepped-Square" the more honest people call them) are pretty horrible.

Whats worse (and not clear from that same diagram) is that few, if any, have regulation - they simply chop the raw DC to the stepped output. In order to keep the "RMS" voltage roughly the same, they adjust the width of those pulses. What this means is that when the battery voltage is high, your "peak" voltage may be *WAY* above the normal 240V sinewave peaks - and in some cases, DANGEROUSLY high.

Similarly, when batteries are low, the pulses are much longer, but may not even be high enough to run a lot of equipment.

In short, for MANY applications, they *WILL* kill your appliances. This is increasingly likely as cheap, low-quality switchmode supplies take over the older transformer-based plugpacks (mostly because the xfmr based ones will not meet the energy/efficiency requirements of under 1W quiescent).

I got rid of my last quasi-wave inverter nearly 20 years ago and wouldn't even *consider* one again. Period.
 
grolly

Regular Member

Joined: 19/05/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 62
Posted: 10:19am 03 Jul 2007
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BIG thankyou for the warning, as I nearly made an expensive boo boo. will stick to looking for PSW inverters from now on. thanks again

Grolly
I have bought the farm...now I AM powering it...
 
Bryan1

Guru

Joined: 22/02/2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 1344
Posted: 10:31am 04 Jul 2007
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Eh Grolly,
Checkout www.kipoint.tw I think thats the website. I bought a 3kw/9kw pure sine inverter $1,500 but customs stung me another $450 so still at $1950 I got a good cheap inverter for the shed. Now I run any motor upto 2hp in the shed with no problems and to me its a good inverter. A few other people here have bought them too and I haven't seen a bad word about them on the net.

Cheers Bryan
 
grolly

Regular Member

Joined: 19/05/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 62
Posted: 12:38pm 13 Jul 2007
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Hi ross, highlander,

just out of intrest, if I get a large modified sign wave inverter(1kw) and ran it into a UPS, or two, and ran the senitive stuff off them, the UPS's ,being pure sine wave inverters,should give a clean output on the 240 volt side.

would the UPS be affected by the modified sine wave input?

Grolly
I have bought the farm...now I AM powering it...
 
RossW
Guru

Joined: 25/02/2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 495
Posted: 08:19pm 13 Jul 2007
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Very few (and none of the recent) UPSs I've encountered will accept squarewave or modified squarewave input, so they wouldn't even sync up.

The exception to this is some of the old "double-conversion" types where the mains did no more than charge batteries and supply DC for the inverter stage.

All the modern "line-interactive" inverters with interactively with the mains, and won't work with MSW, and as for the "transfer" type UPSs, well, forget it. They just pass the mains through until they think it's out of spec (voltage or frequency too high or low) at which point they drop the mains and operate entirely from batteries.

So, short answer long: NO.
 
grolly

Regular Member

Joined: 19/05/2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 62
Posted: 08:09am 14 Jul 2007
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Hi ross, thanks for the info, ...back to the drawing board...

btw Bryan1, the web site didnt work, are you sure it was " www.kipoint.tw" ?

grolly
I have bought the farm...now I AM powering it...
 
Highlander

Senior Member

Joined: 03/10/2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 266
Posted: 08:42am 14 Jul 2007
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Hi Grolly,
Try this

Google will usually find things
Central Victorian highlands
 
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