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Inverter

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Rmcruiser

RVF Regular
Joined
May 11, 2021
Messages
18
Rockwood mini light. 24’. Want to be able to use my outlets when off grid. I don’t want a generator. Is an inverter a big deal ?
 
No, an inverter is not a big deal. Depending on what you want to run and the amount of battery capacity it could turn into an expensive deal........
 
One needs to understand power management. Switch to LED lighting, and use propane for the water heater and refrigerator. So what type of equipment do you plan to use with the outlets? TV - not much power, hair dryer - lots of power, microwave - a LOT of power, Air Conditioning - a LOT of power, Coffee maker - lots of power, recharge cell phones or laptop computer - not much power.

Each piece of equipment lists the power required in watts. If it only gives amps, then multiply amps times 120 volts to get power in watts. Add all of the watts together to figure out the total needs in watts Of course, this assumes one tries to run everything at once. That is insane and an unreasonable expectation. Once you have the total watts, divide by 12 to get the number of amps from the 12-volt batteries. Multiply that by the number of hours you intend to run the item or items and that gives amp-hours. This is the required battery capacity needed in amp-hours. For normal flooded batteries or deep cycle, figure 50% discharge which means you'll need twice the amp-hours required from the batteries as one can safely only use 50% of the battery capacity without damage to the batteries. The converter size in watts should be equal to the largest load, plus about 10% minimum.
 
One needs to understand power management. Switch to LED lighting, and use propane for the water heater and refrigerator. So what type of equipment do you plan to use with the outlets? TV - not much power, hair dryer - lots of power, microwave - a LOT of power, Air Conditioning - a LOT of power, Coffee maker - lots of power, recharge cell phones or laptop computer - not much power.

Each piece of equipment lists the power required in watts. If it only gives amps, then multiply amps times 120 volts to get power in watts. Add all of the watts together to figure out the total needs in watts Of course, this assumes one tries to run everything at once. That is insane and an unreasonable expectation. Once you have the total watts, divide by 12 to get the number of amps from the 12-volt batteries. Multiply that by the number of hours you intend to run the item or items and that gives amp-hours. This is the required battery capacity needed in amp-hours. For normal flooded batteries or deep cycle, figure 50% discharge which means you'll need twice the amp-hours required from the batteries as one can safely only use 50% of the battery capacity without damage to the batteries. The converter size in watts should be equal to the largest load, plus about 10% minimum.
 
Thanks for the explanation. Just want to run a CPAP machine, and would be nice to perk some coffee. Don’t the bigger units have outlets available for use? My point being, $30 k unit dry camping and can’t use outlets. Disappointing!!
 
You’re actually better off. An inverter option would probably cost you more than you’ll spend doing it yourself and you’ll probably end up with better equipment. A lot of RV manufacturers that do include an include an inverter, either as standard or an option, use the cheapest junk from china and it usually only provides enough power for TV, lights, and charging phones. Like 600-1000w.

You want 2kw if your are going to make coffee while doing anything else that requires 120v. A factory system would just be more junk that you‘d rip out and upgrade. As an example my Newmar Bay Star had a 600w inverter. Great for TV I guess, but not near enough to make coffee. I ended up using it as a junction box. I used a 3kw Victron inverter but I was also running AC off a big Li-Ion battery bank. 2kw will run your coffee maker, toaster, and microwave, though one at a time. A hair dryer too if thats an interest.

So go forth and conquer and check back here for thoughts on possible equipment before you buy. For me it would be Magnum, Victron, or Outback ONLY, All three have different attributes/specialties, but you cant go wrong with any of them. They are of course also the most expensive but worth it because you only have to buy once. Get what you pay for and all that.

Bob, thanks for an excellent explanation of power management - better than I could have said it!
 
Also whatever battery or batteries came with your trailer are not up to the task. 2 100ah AGMs would probably be enough and of course you need some way to charge them. If you dont want to use a generator, two 165w 12v panels to should replenish the batteries sufficiently given enough sun. But that also means parking the trailer in the sun so that may not be desirable.
 
I installed a 2KW Pure Sine Wave inverter in our previous trailer. I also upped the battery capacity to use 2 100aH AGM batteries. That would easily run the CPAP machine overnight and still have enough juice in the batteries to perk coffee. But that was about it. I changed all lights to LED and ran the ref and water heater off of propane.

They do make 12 V CPAP machines. These might be more efficient.

The Champion model 200951 is a very good, quiet, and efficient generator for under $500. About what a good inverter and a set of batteries would cost. Of course, one can't run it at night but it certainly will charge batteries.

I read stories of folks spending 10X or more what you spent and have the same issue with outlets.

Bob
 
Thats the key: all overnight usage on whatever is left in the batteries after sundown, plus coffee in the morning before the sun starts contributing again. Once you have that mastered all is well unless you encounter a cloudy day. Then you’ll wish you had more batteries and more solar.
 

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