luthj
Engineer In Residence
Other then previously stated, here are my thoughts.
High powered inverters often have substantial shore power chargers build in (100A+) So space/weight cost savings can sometimes be actualized if you need a decent sized inverter for loads like Aircon starting, water heating, cooktop etc.
12v power adapters are available for most items. As mentioned some battery chargers are not offered. If there is no need for a beefy inverter, a 300W or smaller unit can easily power these loads. Morningstar makes an excellent 300W continuous pure sine inverter with high efficiency and low standby usage.
It depends on the inverter, but many have a (zero load) power consumption in the 10-40W range. The Morningstar suresine uses less than 1 watt in standby, but has a 6W (~450ma) zero load consumption. Which means a 10W load such as a phone charger will use 16W minimum (not counting losses at the inverter or the wall charger). Many inverters have a search function, which pulses power every few seconds/minutes and only stays on if a load is present.
I have seen a few suggestions on other forums that DC appliances (such as fridges) are too expensive. Instead a "dorm" fridge and inverter should be used. Long story short this about doubles the power consumption compared to a DC native fridge.
For big rigs that have substantial solar (over 700W) and/or normal generation runtime schedules. A always on inverter and 120VAC based system makes some sense. This would allow you to run a 24 or 48 volt system for better inverter efficiency, and smaller wiring (it also lets you avoid having lots of batteries in parallel). A 95% efficient DC-DC converter can handle any DC items that need a lower voltage than the main bus. Of course DC appliances are often more efficient than their AC counterparts, so there are lots of variables.
In our vehicle we use an induction cooktop. This is the main reason for a large inverter. As a bonus it also is a fantastic shore power charger, rapidly topping off a depleted bank. I have been tossing around the idea of cutting apart a 5kbtu window Aircon unit and turning it into a compact minisplit for cooling my sleeping area. The inverter would power that as well.
High powered inverters often have substantial shore power chargers build in (100A+) So space/weight cost savings can sometimes be actualized if you need a decent sized inverter for loads like Aircon starting, water heating, cooktop etc.
12v power adapters are available for most items. As mentioned some battery chargers are not offered. If there is no need for a beefy inverter, a 300W or smaller unit can easily power these loads. Morningstar makes an excellent 300W continuous pure sine inverter with high efficiency and low standby usage.
It depends on the inverter, but many have a (zero load) power consumption in the 10-40W range. The Morningstar suresine uses less than 1 watt in standby, but has a 6W (~450ma) zero load consumption. Which means a 10W load such as a phone charger will use 16W minimum (not counting losses at the inverter or the wall charger). Many inverters have a search function, which pulses power every few seconds/minutes and only stays on if a load is present.
I have seen a few suggestions on other forums that DC appliances (such as fridges) are too expensive. Instead a "dorm" fridge and inverter should be used. Long story short this about doubles the power consumption compared to a DC native fridge.
For big rigs that have substantial solar (over 700W) and/or normal generation runtime schedules. A always on inverter and 120VAC based system makes some sense. This would allow you to run a 24 or 48 volt system for better inverter efficiency, and smaller wiring (it also lets you avoid having lots of batteries in parallel). A 95% efficient DC-DC converter can handle any DC items that need a lower voltage than the main bus. Of course DC appliances are often more efficient than their AC counterparts, so there are lots of variables.
In our vehicle we use an induction cooktop. This is the main reason for a large inverter. As a bonus it also is a fantastic shore power charger, rapidly topping off a depleted bank. I have been tossing around the idea of cutting apart a 5kbtu window Aircon unit and turning it into a compact minisplit for cooling my sleeping area. The inverter would power that as well.