Hi William,

If you recall a couple years ago we had some discussion here about a problem 
with a specific make appliance being powered by a Magnum inverter. The problem, 
it was discovered, was the appliance input PF was creating current demands that 
the transformer based inverter could not keep up with. When I powered the load 
with a low cost, high frequency inverter, it worked fine. Apparently the HF 
inverter can keep up with the current changes faster than the Magnum.

To fix the problem, a 50mf run type capacitor was installed in the appliance so 
that it was applied across the AC input when powered on. Everything worked fine 
then because the cap was taming the wild current created by the low PF. 

Try looking at the current and voltage waveform together (AC shunt, dual trace 
scope) at the UPS input. If the current is displaying large spikes and/or is 
out of phase, you may have found the problem is with a non linear load from the 
UPS. It may be the SI, like the Magnum, can not keep up and so the UPS input 
circuits are throwing a fit.

Or, something else you can try, connect a high frequency inverter and try to 
power the UPS. This can be a portable 12 volt battery and inverter. If the 
problem disappears, well, you take it from there.

Larry



On Oct 11, 2014, at 11:21 PM, William Miller <will...@millersolar.com> wrote:

Friends:
 
I am still having a pi$$ing match with the company that installed the expensive 
home entertainment system for a client over the issue of power quality.  The 
UPS beeps frequently and the AV system crashes now and then.  The lead 
installer has copped an attitude and is blaming the Sunny Island / Sunny Boy / 
Generac system for the AV system problems.  The UPS emails reports in flurries 
that indicate a “power failure” has occurred. 
 
I have a Dataq data acquisition system sampling at a rate that allows me to see 
the individual cycles on the system output on one of three phases.  During the 
time that a power failure is reported to have occurred each and every cycle 
looks great.  I know this is not a definitive test of power quality so I upped 
my game.  I bought a Fluke VR1710 power monitor and I am recording power 
quality from the same receptacle that feeds the UPS.
 
I have some log files from the Fluke Power Log software but the instructions 
are not that great and I don’t know how to interpret the data.  Do any of you 
have any experience with this software and could possibly advise me?
 
In a more general sense, how good is power to be called “good”?  I have done 
some research and the industry material is a bit overwhelming.  Does anyone 
have a short answer?
 
And lastly, even though the UPS is beeping, if it is doing what it is designed 
to do, the power quality should not be an issue because the UPS corrects for 
any problems.  (Actually the UPS was beeping—the best move in this situation 
was to mute the annunciator so at least the homeowner is not hearing the 
beeper.)
 
I know others of you are dealing with the same problems because it came up on 
this forum.  I am interested in an approach that verifies the Sunny Islands are 
producing adequately good power, or not, so I can either address the problem or 
get the AV guy off my rear end.
 
Thanks in advance.
 
William
 


_______________________________________________
List sponsored by Redwood Alliance

List Address: RE-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org

Change listserver email address & settings:
http://lists.re-wrenches.org/options.cgi/re-wrenches-re-wrenches.org

List-Archive: 
http://www.mail-archive.com/re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org/maillist.html

List rules & etiquette:
www.re-wrenches.org/etiquette.htm

Check out or update participant bios:
www.members.re-wrenches.org

Reply via email to