When we acquired our boat a few months ago it had a Xantrex Freedom charger/inverter, a large house battery, and a normal sized starting battery. Alas the house battery, even though it was large, was a starting battery, not deep cycle. Not going to meet our needs for liveaboard.
Then I tried to see if the inverter worked. My first attempt fried a GFCI outlet in the kitchen. Another attempt let out a pop and a burning smell from the inverter. It always claimed to be overloaded when trying to run the inverter.
Maybe it would have worked if I had operated it exactly correctly, so I'll take some of the blame (didn't do forensics on the wiring before I tried it out). But it was wired spectacularly incorrectly. The inverter 120V output was wired directly to the output lug of the Outlets circuit breaker on the 120V panel. So I believe the intention was to turn off all of the 120V breakers and then run the inverter to power the outlets. It could be very exciting to have 120V outlets powered even when the Outlets breaker is turned off! And lastly, the 120V feed to the inverter was supplied via the Battery Charger breaker on the 120V panel (with shore power going directly into the Shore Power A bus of course).
The manual said that the recommended way to wire it was to run the shore power connection directly to the 120V input on the charger/inverter. Then power all the 120V loads from the inverter output (actually bridged to shore power when shore power is connected) and optionally connect some loads like the water heater to the second 120V output on the Xantrex that is only live when shore power is connected. At the time I was just getting into Nigel Calder's electrical book and that recommendation matched what he described as a "DC system", which I did like.
Continued in next post...
Then I tried to see if the inverter worked. My first attempt fried a GFCI outlet in the kitchen. Another attempt let out a pop and a burning smell from the inverter. It always claimed to be overloaded when trying to run the inverter.
Maybe it would have worked if I had operated it exactly correctly, so I'll take some of the blame (didn't do forensics on the wiring before I tried it out). But it was wired spectacularly incorrectly. The inverter 120V output was wired directly to the output lug of the Outlets circuit breaker on the 120V panel. So I believe the intention was to turn off all of the 120V breakers and then run the inverter to power the outlets. It could be very exciting to have 120V outlets powered even when the Outlets breaker is turned off! And lastly, the 120V feed to the inverter was supplied via the Battery Charger breaker on the 120V panel (with shore power going directly into the Shore Power A bus of course).
The manual said that the recommended way to wire it was to run the shore power connection directly to the 120V input on the charger/inverter. Then power all the 120V loads from the inverter output (actually bridged to shore power when shore power is connected) and optionally connect some loads like the water heater to the second 120V output on the Xantrex that is only live when shore power is connected. At the time I was just getting into Nigel Calder's electrical book and that recommendation matched what he described as a "DC system", which I did like.
Continued in next post...