Really?
So running your cables at above the boiling point for water is a good idea?
Let me ask you MS, if you were running your microwave at home and you somehow managed to feel the power supply cord and it was "burning hot" but not smoking what would you do? I know what my First Mate would do and she does not have an engineering degree.
In the interest of having a second opinion let me do some checking tonight on the actual spec sheets for all this stuff and give you my "reasoned" answer.
Specifically: given a 1900 watt inverter what size fuse and wire should you use? Note the “should” Account for the 3% voltage drop, single run wires (no bundles) and a maximum run time of 5 minutes and complete cooling between runs. The run length is 4 foot round trip and we will assume that the cables are terminated properly and in accordance with best practices. Since we are having an issue with proper temp to run thing at, I’ll just quote the wire size vs temp after 5 minutes and cooling time and let the group determine what “should” be used.
My gut feeling is the ABYC is correct but that is just what you CAN get away with. It does not mean you should design it to operate that way. I’d note that you can’t specify a standard with anything but a safety factor of 1 and it is up to the engineers to ensure that the specific install is in fact safe to operate as designed.
BTW at 0.29 volt drop and 127 amps you have 37 watts being dissipated / 4 foot of cable. So 9 watts/foot. It does not sound like much but wire has this really nasty property of being a poor heat dissipater. Betcha those wires are somewhat more than ambient after 4 minutes of operation.
Bill,
The 250A fuse is there ONLY to protect the wire NOT the inverter. It is currently sized well blow the ABYC Table IV max ampacity ratings. It is also sized to the MANUFACTURERS suggestion. Perhaps your second guessing should be with Xantrex and the ABYC. I am sure they are willing to listen to you edumacate them..
Pete's voltage drop is also LESS, based on what he has provided us with, than what the manufacturer suggests. Xantrex allows for 0.03V per foot Pete is at 0.024V per foot.
Lets take a worst case scenario of 3000W surge or 300A. (continuous is only 1800W)
Pete claims to have 8' of 2/0 wire BUT is using two different meters, with limited accuracy, to determine his VD. I suspect he has LESS than 0.28V unless he has more wire than we know about.. Even still at his face value numbers he has less than 3% VD.
The basic voltage drop math shows us:
300A over 8' of 2/0 wire & a 12 volt starting point yields a voltage drop of 0.192 volts or a 1.6% voltage drop. 1.6% VD is a dream on boats. I REGULARLY measure alternator circuits with 5% VD or more. I have yet to see a "melted jacket" due to voltage drops below 10%..
The ABYC standards allow for up to 10% voltage drop in "non critical" systems eg: not nav lights, VHF etc. etc. and mandate 3% for "critical" systems. A 1.6% voltage drop is quite good in any 12V system.
You have an inverter. What is the gauge of your wire and what is the wattage of your inverter? Perhaps a picture of it would help? What are the wire lengths round trip?
Boiling water with a 1.6% voltage drop, really? Is it 5:00 somewhere???
