ErikSS wrote:James, have you tried to use a 30 amp appliance on a 1500 amp peak inverter? It doesn't come close. I can hardly use 5 amp appliances with my 750 constant/1500 peak inverter. Amps are a ratio of wattage at a certain volt. It is directly affected by both. It sounds like he has the right formula but had mixed up input and output for numbers to plug in.
30 amp appliance on a 1500 watt (I assume you meant?) peak inverter will certainly not work. 30 amps x 120 volts = 3600 watts. Peak ratings are also not meant to be sustained current. They're really only talking about the instantaneous peak requirements of things like motors to get spinning. The amperage trace of an electric motor spikes at the beginning of use. 5 amp 120v appliance pulls 600 watts, so that sounds about right for a 750 watt inverter.
Shdwdrgn wrote:So it seems folks on other offroad forums are suggesting 6ga or 4ga wire to hook this thing up. What I don't understand is that this seems a lot larger than the wire used for the 125A feed to the rear fuse box. Did I mis-read the rating on that wire, or am I just totally off in left field here?
I think there's a difference between a wire sized for chassis aka non-constant pull wires, and power transmission wires. They sized it a bit liberally, not expecting to ever really reach a draw the size of the mega fuse. At least that's my take.
Shdwdrgn wrote:James, you would think I would know these things -- my dad was an electrician and I have an EE degree. You're right, power stays the same, so the 750W is the same on both sides of the rail, meaning that a lower voltage requires an increase in amperage. So 125A at peak usage is reasonable. Now the only question is if I actually HAVE that much power available under the seat, or if I need to run a dedicated line up to the battery.
Just remember that the peak rating of the inverter is an instantaneous rating, it won't pull that for longer than a fraction of a second. Probably not long enough to blow the megafuse, but I'd still keep a spare all the same. You can probably fuse the inverter at 80 amps and be safe.