Tuesday, Jul 23, 2013 at 10:47
David,
Firstly the answer to running two
inverters from the one battery is YES. You can connect both
inverters to a single battery no problems - run a separate cable and fuse for the new inverter. The
inverters can be both or singly one at any time. The inverter power usage is based on what is plugged in to the 240V socket, so small power devices like camera charges draw very little - it is impossible to quote a number for the power without knowing the load you intend to run. Basic maths of P (power) = V (voltage) * I (current) is the first function to look at so a 200W load on 240V is a .83 Amp draw at 240V move to the 12V side (ignoring conversion loss in the inverter) to source this level or power with 100% efficiency would require 20 times the current at 12V so approximately 16.6Amps at 12V.
Your panels at 240W will deliver at best and assuming 100% of the rated output (which you will never get), perfect sun angle and no losses in the controllers 13.9Amps at 17.2V.
So if you run a 200W load all day (which is unlikely) and have perfect 100% full sun all day (also unlikely) your 240W panels will not keep up with this level of load. Factor losses, sun angle, conversions and reality and you will be lucky to see around 50-60% of the panel power available so you could be struggling to run a 100W load all day. There are so many variables, it is not a clear case of yes or no.
The answer is to go as big as you can fit and afford/justify.
Have a look at the
Solar Power article I will link to this thread for further information.
David
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