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GRID TIE INVERTER SOLAR POWER EASY SOLAR SOLUTION POWER INVERTERS

By admin On July 8, 2009 Under residential solar

http://www.greenpowerscience.com/
This is a grid tie inverter that is 200 watts. It actually reads a bit higher for various reasons. This was to see how well it worked. POWER INVERTERS.

Duration : 0:12:24


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free solar |diy solar|residential solar|diy solar panels

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25 Comments Add yours

  1. ginno1album
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    I finally find out …
    I finally find out that i need at least 1,000 watts of use a 12 hours a day, what will be a good advise for my needs?

  2. ginno1album
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    ok, wow 4000 watts …
    ok, wow 4000 watts of wolar panells will be a lot of money to invest. let me see if i am clear … what equipment i will protect with those fuses? they must be on the heavy wires side between the batteries and the inverter?

  3. gman64able
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    video is great …
    video is great thanks for doing what you are doing i just bought a sunwize 4 panel used solar unit with 5 batteries and a charger contrler how would charger the batteries and tie into my house at the same time is there a video or a dvd that i can buy

  4. rayed56
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    I have a question …
    I have a question how long have you been running this inverter, my friend has one from April now the fan on the back has stopped working today in June

  5. GREENPOWERSCIENCE
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    Make sure you have …
    Make sure you have very heavy gauge wire and place a solid set of fuses. Your wattage of panels should be 2x what you expect to use in a day. So if you are running 2KW solid then you would need 4000 watts of panels to go grid free.

    If you only need short bursts of power, then you can charge 1 day and run for a bit the next.

  6. ginno1album
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    if i have a wagan …
    if i have a wagan 8,000 watts inverter and i buy two deep cycle batteries of 12 volt and i connect them parallel what amount of watts of a solar power i need to make it work properly and what else?

  7. wlfee1969
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    The efficiency of …
    The efficiency of these inverters is about 80 to 85 percent. A battery charger is much worse. Would actually cost more to run.

  8. bryan17777
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    Great Video!!! One …
    Great Video!!! One question though. You said that it’s not a good idea to connect 2 of the Harbor Freight panels in series. Why is that? If you purchased 2 sets of 3, (total of 6 panels) couldn’t you connect 2 sets of 3 in parallel and those 2 sets in series? That would give you 24 volts and a higher wattage output.

  9. dalesd
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    My 4kW 240V …
    My 4kW 240V inverter has a range of 212 to 264 volts. The utility company isn’t going to go outside that range. Really bad things can happen to stuff that’s plugged in if the grid voltage goes outside that range. I mean, things can burn out or blow up.

    So no, the utility company isn’t going to turn up the voltage just to keep your 200W inverter out of business.

  10. Anothercoilgun
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    True but of the …
    True but of the grid pushes more than inverter can supply, the inverter no longer exist.

  11. dalesd
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    My 4kW grid-tied …
    My 4kW grid-tied inverter works the same way. If the grid power goes down, it shuts off.
    However, there’s also an inverter AC disconnect mounted outside (near the meter). I guess the reasoning is that it’s better to have a physical disconnect switch, so you’re not relying on the circuitry in the inverter in a situation that could kill someone. In other words, a single point of failure should never result in an unsafe situation.

  12. dalesd
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    A grid-tied …
    A grid-tied inverter senses the voltage and frequency on the AC side and makes its output match.

  13. dalesd
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    I have a 3.5kW …
    I have a 3.5kW grid-tied solar system with a net-power meter. Yes, it really runs backwards during the day.

    Those squares on the display each represent one watt-hour. The faster they ‘move’ the more power you’re using. They move backwards when the PV is feeding the grid. (That’s how my meter works, yours is probably the same.)

  14. ginno1album
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    at the end the …
    at the end the batteries will die? or you can add with that same electricity from the power inverter to a battery charger and from the battery charger to the batteries so you have a circular endless cycle of producing and extracting energy from the battery to the power inverter?

  15. solarcradle
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    Wow, these grid tie …
    Wow, these grid tie inverters are EXPENSIVE on ebay. I’m guessing much cheaper than any sold by government vendors in Canada Ontario. We have a neat Provincial incentives program for feeding back to the grid. I hear it doesn’t pay off for almost a decade. :)

  16. mastersduhgree
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    Be nice….?
    Be nice….?

  17. mastersduhgree
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    RIght quad but that …
    RIght quad but that would be retail price.If you produce it rhen you are paid 20$

  18. quadehale
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    lol. not true at …
    lol. not true at all. of course, rates vary from location to location. most people pay about 50 cents a kilowatt-hour. up here in Ontario, Canada, a new program increases government payout for rooftop PV solar systems to 80.2 cents a kilowatt-hour.

  19. bigface01
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    you should hook up …
    you should hook up a 200w load at the same time, then after a few hours if the meter hasn’t changed you know the inverter works.

  20. bigface01
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    What’s the scale on …
    What’s the scale on that meter? If it has precision of only one kilowatt maybe the meter didn’t turn backwards because you didn’t put a full kilowatt into the grid. You only put put 200watts*.66hrs= .133kwhs

  21. mastersduhgree
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    I think raw power …
    I think raw power is $20 a megawatt…youd have to produce a monumental amount to make a dime on it.

  22. laidofftomass
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    Yeah those …
    Yeah those inverter’s are cool. Last time I checked into buying one I found out they are not UL approved. If I start spinning my meter back or use alot less electricity it throws a red flag and they want a inspection done by a electrical inspector. If they see that inverter they could make me stop using it if they want and fine me if I still do use it. I love new york. I hope they are UL approved now and if they are please let me know. I would love to put one on my dump load.

  23. GREENPOWERSCIENCE
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    Ebay has them up to …
    Ebay has them up to 1600 watts. Just be careful, some sellers are listing regular inverters as grid tied. Read the listing body copy. They even come in 220-240

  24. 76lighty
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    Sounds good, Where …
    Sounds good, Where do we get one of these in Australia. And what size wattage do they go up to.
    keep the good work up.

  25. jamesdawson27
    July 8, 2009
    2:47 pm

    Great Video
    Great Video

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