Use a relay?
On Mar 4, 2016 4:19 PM, "Gino Villarini" <[email protected]> wrote:

> thats weird, it leaves no space for lvd
>
> Sent from Outlook Mobile <https://aka.ms/qtex0l>
>
>
>
>
> On Fri, Mar 4, 2016 at 2:16 PM -0800, <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Frequently the rectifier and batts both go to the bus bar in the fuse or
>> circuit breaker panel.
>> Some folks feed both the rectifier and batts through a circuit breaker.
>> If you do that you need to make sure the breaker can handle the max output
>> of the rectifer or more.  When there has been an extended power outage the
>> batts will max out the rectifier current.
>>
>> *From:* Scott Vander Dussen <[email protected]>
>> *Sent:* Friday, March 4, 2016 1:26 PM
>> *To:* [email protected]
>> *Subject:* [AFMUG] Eltek Rectifier Huh?
>>
>>
>> Trying to figure these things out!  I purchased and built an Eltek
>> rectifier product using these products:
>>
>>
>>
>> CG1S-AUN-VC COMPACT POWER SHELF / REAR WIRE 200AMP MAX 48V UNIVERSAL
>> OUTPUT POLARITY
>>
>> BC2000-A01-10VC 48V, SYSTEM CONTROLLER W/ ETHERNET, NEXTGENERATION, W/
>> CLEI
>>
>> V0750A-VC RECTIFIER, 840W, 53.5V, 15A, FAN COOLED (BOTTOM TO TOP) -INPUT:
>> 90-264VAC
>>
>>
>>
>> It seems like this just takes AC power and gives me 48v DC out.  I was
>> expecting it would also attach to a battery array and provide charging of
>> those batteries plus use their power source if grid power was lost.  Am I
>> totally wrong on that?  I don’t see any method of connecting batteries to
>> this power shelf :/
>>
>>
>>
>> Noob out,
>>
>> Scott
>>
>

Reply via email to