Hi Mick & Jay,
I disconnected the gen. line to the inverter and tested the output and got steady voltage. I then re-connected the inverter and tested the gen. output from a different outlet and got steady voltage, both around 122v. So I've ruled out the generator. It was my first suspicion.

I have also noticed that when the household loads are off the inverter output appears stable, doesn't fluctuate except about every 20 seconds inverter audibly, the voltage drops from around 120 to 110 then resumes - as if the input was momentarily dropped.

Darryl,
I did play with the AC charge current lowering it to around 5 aac but it didn't seem to make a difference. The owner told me, as an afterthought that someone had wired a switch incorrectly and when he turned it on the system "shut down". He then re-wired it and everything appeared ok but I'm wondering if this fried a board. I know there is an ac control board in there ... could this be it?

BTW, it's a very small generator, Honda 3800.

Ron

It sounds like the AC charge current is set to high, with the batteries being low the inverter charge rate is overloading the gen set. The gen set voltage drops and the inverter releases the genny and the voltage returns, the inverter reloads the genny and the cycle repeats. If this worked before the gen set need attension, if not (changes to settings having occured or batteries just to low) reduce the AC charge current.
Daryl


On 27-Dec-08, at 8:58 AM, jay peltz wrote:

Hi Ron,

Almost for sure its the genny. What type and when was it last serviced and how many hours does it have?

if the voltage is going all over the place really quickly then its not connecting to the inverter at all.

So here is a test that might help. Turn on a resistive load such as a floor heater ( size depends on the generator) to lock in the voltage. At this point if the voltage is constant, then the inverter might connect.

If this works, then the problem is most likely the genny, which case its needs some work.

jay

peltz power





On Dec 26, 2008, at 8:43 PM, R Young wrote:

I'm having a problem with an Outback VFX3524 inverter installed on an E-panel in a remote off-grid location. Voltage at the inverter input terminals is fluctuating between 110 & 140+ volts continuously. AC in will not connect so batteries can't charge. Output voltage measured at the inverter output terminals is steady at 122v. When all household loads are turned off the input terminal voltage stabilizes but AC In still does not connect.

Generator does not seem to be at fault as output measured at the gen. is stable even under load. System was working for about 1 1/2 years but under new ownership has been badly monitored and batteries have become totally discharged.

I'm trying to determine if this is a circuit board problem so I can perform a rescue mission by pulling some boards from an in- stock inverter, Outback tech support are on holidays. Anyone had a similar problem?

Ron Young

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