Wrench Wench
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One use a MEP might be put to is simply as an emergency recharging system when (not if) the solar array fails, the sun and weather aren't cooperating to keep your battery bank charged, or if you simply have larger draws on your system than you scaled your battery bank and solar array for.
To that end, it would be necessary to rectify the AC produced by a MAP to a DC (even if pulsed) current to replace what the charge controller expected to see from the solar array. (We're gonna ignore issues like dual-dual conversion loses, like converting electrical power to battery storage to just convert them back to current, or converting from AC to DC for storage when the end use to which it will be put is AC again.)
My question is, with a 3-phase high current rectifier such as:
150A 800V 3 Phase Bridge Rectifier: Virtual Village - US
What would be the largest MEP unit to which it could be attached without over-current. (I'm presuming a voltage limit of 800 VAC would not be problematic for a family of generators that produces at most a nominal 440 VAC.) There should also be no problem attaching a split-phase MEP to this 3-phase rectifier, but considering that there are many more high power rectifiers at Virtual Village.com that include 2-phase units that cost much less, it would be foolhardy not to properly match the rectifier to the MEP.
I would assume that the DC voltage output by the rectifier would be the RMS voltage from the AC generator, but I'm a bit brain-addled from a month back in college, so I might be remembering that detail wrong. In addition, I can't think about how much power loss this thing could reasonably entail.
So, whattaya think? Would this do the job, and if so, what's the biggest MEP it would work with?
To that end, it would be necessary to rectify the AC produced by a MAP to a DC (even if pulsed) current to replace what the charge controller expected to see from the solar array. (We're gonna ignore issues like dual-dual conversion loses, like converting electrical power to battery storage to just convert them back to current, or converting from AC to DC for storage when the end use to which it will be put is AC again.)
My question is, with a 3-phase high current rectifier such as:
150A 800V 3 Phase Bridge Rectifier: Virtual Village - US
What would be the largest MEP unit to which it could be attached without over-current. (I'm presuming a voltage limit of 800 VAC would not be problematic for a family of generators that produces at most a nominal 440 VAC.) There should also be no problem attaching a split-phase MEP to this 3-phase rectifier, but considering that there are many more high power rectifiers at Virtual Village.com that include 2-phase units that cost much less, it would be foolhardy not to properly match the rectifier to the MEP.
I would assume that the DC voltage output by the rectifier would be the RMS voltage from the AC generator, but I'm a bit brain-addled from a month back in college, so I might be remembering that detail wrong. In addition, I can't think about how much power loss this thing could reasonably entail.
So, whattaya think? Would this do the job, and if so, what's the biggest MEP it would work with?