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No hay artículos en el carro12 V CD - 120 V CA. Corriente continua : 2000 W.
Vagabond8400
Comentado en Canadá el 24 de abril de 2015
Works great. Came without one of the cables but Tripp Lite immediately sent one. So far so good.
Rawze
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 23 de febrero de 2013
I put one of these in my 18-Wheeler and am very happy with it. I use it to charge my batteries when at a 'sure-power' station, and at home, and it provides 120volt power when not plugged in to an outlet. Having constant 120v power in my truck is fantastic, and I run a bunch of ham-radio gear (HF and VHF) off this thing as well. Although not completely pure sine-wave, there are NO 'birdies' or noise issues from any of my radios on any band, so thats great, but this thing is definitely NOT pure Sine-wave. I have a couple of laptop and cell-phone chargers that do not like the power this thing provides, and will refuse to operate when plugged into it. As far as 'Power', All i can say is 'WoW'! It definitely has no issue with providing power, and a lot of it. Microwave, computers, 1/2" drills, I have even used a big shop-vac with it. The battery conditioning cycles it does when plugged in have definitely extended the life of my truck batteries, so that is good too. I installed a 250-AMP leese-neville alternator on my truck to go with this thing, and the alternator barely gets warm when using A 900watt microwave.
Kindle Customer
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 5 de enero de 2013
I installed this as part of a solar electric system that powers some lights and freezers. It works great for that. Obviously not all the bells and whistles of a solar inverter and this is only modified sine wave not full sine. It works well for most things though. A couple of important points if someone was planning on using it for that purpose.1. This is modified sine wave. It will run motors and lights and smaller electrical appliances and older televisions even. It wont run newer TVs (I don't know what the cutoff age or technology is - it runs an old CRT type fine. It causes buzzing on a newer LED TV). It wont run UPSes, though it will run some computers and charge laptop batteries.2. It gives precedence to line power, not batteries. This is easily dealt with if you get a battery monitoring device (or if your charge controller can do it) that can send 12 volts to an auxiliary connection. Then get a solid state relay. You will either need normally open or normally closed. With an Outback 80 it has to be normally closed. Then you can set up an event that opens the relay, which is connected to your line input, when the battery's charge falls below a setpoint. You might be able to start a generator in the same way. I am going to try that soon.3. At the time I purchased this, Tripplite does not have the battery temperature sensor cable available for purchase. They advertise the functionality but you cant buy the cable. They assure me that it is due for release very soon but this inverter has been available for years so why would they not have the cable? Not major but not insignificant either...4. The documentation that comes with the inverter is pretty sparse. In particular, there is a low-amp charge setting and a high-amp charge setting. How may amps on each setting is not specified and the documentation on the web is inconsistent. I tested it and got 25 amps on low and 100 amps on high (DC amps). This concurs with SOME of the documentation on the web and what is now in the description here on Amazon.For 25% of the cost of the least expensive solar inverter, this will do the trick - at least until I upgrade to 24 volt battery banks and then I will likely spring for a higher watt Magnum or Outback inverter. I would recommend it if you need to cut some cost of a solar power system, at least based on how it has worked so far. Time will tell and I will update if there are early failures.
EeeVee
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de enero de 2013
This is my third Tripp Lite inverter. The first two are permanently installed as uninterruptible power supplies (UPS) for two of my computer work areas.I purchased this item in order to construct a GASOLINE-FREE, OFF-THE-GRID, PORTABLE POWER GENERATOR for use when public utility power fails.More precisely, I bought this in order to author a white paper/special report outlining the process of how to build such a unit. Each step of the assembly process has been photographically documented and is included with a narrative. (The final report will be in a video format.)In short, the unit is comprised of the Tripp Lite inverter mounted to a piece of 3/4 inch plywood. The plywood is then vertically bolted to a wheeled hand truck. On the footplate of the hand truck is bolted another piece of 3/4 plywood,on which a 12 volt deep-cycle marine battery is placed.Heavy #2 gauge battery cable cable leads from the battery to the inverter input. There is an emergency cut-off switch to disable the battery.120 volt AC wiring from the inverter output leads to eight standard wall-type outlets, which are mounted on the inverter platform.Because the Tripp Lite inverter has a built-in battery trickle charger, it is intended that the inverter always be plugged into a 120 volt AC power source (standard wall outlet) when not in use.The entire unit weights about 100 pounds, but is easily wheeled to the location where it is needed because of the hand truck.
Trevor L. Griffiths
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 26 de febrero de 2012
I bought the first unit in August 2011, it arrived quickly. Easy hook up. I have a bank of 8 - 6volt golf cart batteries. This unit ran for 3 months flawlessly , then just quit.Triplite Customer service was great and after some trouble shooting, I returned the unit. Cost $56 shipping. They sent me a replacement right away.I bought another unit from Amazon immediately when this one failed (2day shipping, I now have 2 ) and the second one has ran, again flawlessly, for 4 months. I have a use for the second unit in another building. For the price, this is a good unit.We use this unit 24/7 to power a 40' travel trailer we live in (@ 6000ft) while building a home. Of course we have to be power conscious, but it serves our needs.I have had Trace, Heart, and Magnum inverter/chargers. All were bullet proof!!, but a lot more expensive, which is why I chose to try this one. I added the remote monitor to this unit so I don't have to open the compartment to check the state of charge of the batteries. This unit can generate heat when charging so make sure there is adequate ventilation.All in all , good bang for your buck and excellent customer service. Hope this helped.
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