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Tiny House Solar, Wiring Inverter to AC Electric
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If the GFCIs would not work that way, the engineers that design inverters would not include GFCIs in the inverters. You insulted the design engineers. Good luck in convincing anybody with more then three active brain cells, that you know what your talking about.
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Perhaps learning more before giving bad advice on line would be wise. You'd probably regret it if your advice resulted in an injury or a fire.
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Sorry for my confusion. I try to make sure others not experienced with electrical circuits do it as safely as possible.Leave a comment:
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That is 100% correct. However I was addressing the OP not you. Also observe my statement on voltage and wire size, it is in agreement with your statement. Wire size is something that needs to be addressed in the initial design.Last edited by Falsa_Nominis; 03-27-2018, 08:26 PM.Leave a comment:
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Look the OP can do whatever they want to do. They asked if it was ok to wire their tiny house panel using a plug and cord from an inverter receptacle and I stated it was not safe.Leave a comment:
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It is built in to the inverter, If you could relocate it, doing so would leave a branch unprotected. Are you trying to get the OP killed? However GFCI outlets would not be a bad idea.Leave a comment:
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OP stated "2 AC electric lines running in it. 1 for 2 led lights and 1 line for 3 receptacles" clearly no down stream branching.Leave a comment:
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OP stated the inverter has a GFCI outlet that should cover protecting people, assuming all three lines are used. OP did not state what voltage the system is or the wire size, that is something that should be looked at.Leave a comment:
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1) The inverter's overload protection protects the INVERTER not the wiring. You can easily start a fire by using thin gauge wire with a 3000 watt inverter. You need breakers or fuses that will open before the wiring is damaged.
2) Many inverters cannot be wired to permanent structures due to how they drive their neutral. You need an inverter that can have neutral commoned with ground at the appropriate location. (i.e. good sine wave inverter rated for direct wiring.)
3) To have any GFI breaker work (often necessary in structures people live in) you need the above-mentioned neutral-ground bond. This is done differently in permanent structures than in RV's or trailers; sometimes a relay is necessary to make it work correctly.Leave a comment:
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Most inverters have built in overload protection, does the same function as a breaker box.Leave a comment:
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If you mean "tiny house" as something that could be dragged around like a travel trailer, then I would look into RV system wiring. They will show you that running a cord from the receptacel of an inverter and hard wired into an AC circuit breaker panel is not very safe.
Better to use an RV style inverter that is hard wired between it and the AC panel and has it's wire protected with overcurrent devicies.
As for using 100 watt panel....I think PNP has expressed most opinions that it is not cost effective to use them.Leave a comment:
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