I have a bit of a problem with what is otherwise a really good backup power system. I use a 2500w Cobra inverter attached to the spare batteries with four 4-gauge cables. There are two 70 amp-hour batteries in the belly, which, ideally, should give me 1680 watt-hours of energy. If I use DC power, I can have all I want, but as soon as the alternator is switched off, the battery voltage goes down to 11.9, then 11.8, and when it hits about 11.7, the inverter squeals "low voltage" and shuts down, even when the load is less than 100 watts (or is it kVA?). I don't fully understand the AC sine wave, much less the squared-off PDC wave that the inverter puts out, but anyway...
Does anyone know if an inverter's low voltage cutoff can be adjusted, or a way to raise the battery voltage? Lead-acid batteries will drop steadily in voltage as they are drained, which is fine for DC circuits, but if the inverter has to have more than 12v to function, then it would take three or four alternators to keep it going continuously. So why the fuck do they make a 2500w inverter? I'm only able to run my Christmas lights on the battery and inverter for an hour or two before it shuts down, which really sucks ass. It also doesn't make much sense, because I ran a window air conditioner on the batteries once. Maybe driving it around town isn't charging the batteries enough...
I know. How bout if I plug a battery charger into the inverter and use it to charge the batteries? Then it should go on producing power forever, like a perpetual motion machine. I think I am losing my mind, or it just isn't responding to massage therapy today.
Seriously...does anyone have a better idea for backup AC power, aside from throwing a generator in?
-denise
Does anyone know if an inverter's low voltage cutoff can be adjusted, or a way to raise the battery voltage? Lead-acid batteries will drop steadily in voltage as they are drained, which is fine for DC circuits, but if the inverter has to have more than 12v to function, then it would take three or four alternators to keep it going continuously. So why the fuck do they make a 2500w inverter? I'm only able to run my Christmas lights on the battery and inverter for an hour or two before it shuts down, which really sucks ass. It also doesn't make much sense, because I ran a window air conditioner on the batteries once. Maybe driving it around town isn't charging the batteries enough...
I know. How bout if I plug a battery charger into the inverter and use it to charge the batteries? Then it should go on producing power forever, like a perpetual motion machine. I think I am losing my mind, or it just isn't responding to massage therapy today.
Seriously...does anyone have a better idea for backup AC power, aside from throwing a generator in?
-denise
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