This will be a great inverter for our RV. You can check out this product here: amzn.to/48zhk5x. Thanks for watching!
@howardescoffery49508 ай бұрын
Man I was dying to see the inside of it.
@SeidelRanchReviews8 ай бұрын
Sorry. I don't usually tear them apart. Maybe next time.
@howardescoffery49508 ай бұрын
@@SeidelRanchReviews Honestly the inside is the real inverter, the rest is just shiney stuff.
@SeidelRanchReviews8 ай бұрын
@@howardescoffery4950 True
@solarcharging97438 ай бұрын
I would never install on of these short lived high frequency, transformerless inverter in my RV. Because this manufacturer was too cheap to install an iron core, copper wound output transformer, this unit has the potential to not only damaging your AC appliances, it can also set your appliances on fire. You might be able to start and run some high surge loads when these high frequency inverters are new, but every time you fire up one of those inductive loads, you're shortening the life of the MOSFETs in these inverters. With a low 2X surge capacity, these lightweight, high frequency inverters also run much hotter than low frequency, transformer-based inverters which makes the low cost, off spec, Chinese made components such as capacitors, diodes, resistors and ICs that are used in these inverters, far more prone to early failure. Another major consideration with these lightweight, high frequency, transformerless inverters is safety. All it takes is for the AC output monitoring circuitry to fail and one of the MOSFETs in the inverter's H-Bridge circuit to short to ground, and these inverters can send dangerous, high voltage, high amperage DC current straight to your connected AC loads which will not only damage most AC appliances but can also set those AC appliances on fire. And by the way, it's not 2,000 kilowatts, It's 2,000 Watts.
@SeidelRanchReviews8 ай бұрын
Did I say 2000 kilowatts? That was a mistake. I meant 2000 watts. I looked up the low frequency inverters and they seem to be a lot more money and much larger. Are those basically going to last forever VS the high-frequency inverters?
@solarcharging97438 ай бұрын
Not forever, closer to a decade longer than a transformetless, high frequency unit.@@SeidelRanchReviews
@SeidelRanchReviews8 ай бұрын
@@solarcharging9743 How long would a high frequency unit last? I am looking to do a large solar setup in the RV and I want to make sure it's going to last 20 plus years.