indcontrols
New member
- Location
- Rotonda West, FL
I live in Florida, where in the summer, power can go out for days. I am investigating the use of sealed lead acid batteries and a 12VDC to 120VAC inverter for temporary, portable, emergency power to keep the refrigerator going and microwave, phone charger, lamp(s) as needed.
The 2000 watt continuous (4000 watt surge) inverter I purchased has 3 prong receptacles on it. I opened the cover and found that the ground terminal of the receptacle is connected to the case of the inverter. There is no ground lug on the inverter and no mention of connecting the inverter to ground. The pictures on the inverter show it used in vehicles, tent camping and home use.
The ground issue prompted me to investigate the NEC. There are code related to photo voltaic inverts wired into the house wiring, but I do not see anything related to a free standing inverter, not wired into the house wiring. My search on the web did not produce anything.
Questions:
Thank you!
The 2000 watt continuous (4000 watt surge) inverter I purchased has 3 prong receptacles on it. I opened the cover and found that the ground terminal of the receptacle is connected to the case of the inverter. There is no ground lug on the inverter and no mention of connecting the inverter to ground. The pictures on the inverter show it used in vehicles, tent camping and home use.
The ground issue prompted me to investigate the NEC. There are code related to photo voltaic inverts wired into the house wiring, but I do not see anything related to a free standing inverter, not wired into the house wiring. My search on the web did not produce anything.
Questions:
- Are there electric code(s) related to Temporary Emergency Power systems that are not wired into the house wiring?
- Should I ground the inverter to a copper water pipe with a ground clamp and a wire to the chassis of the inverter?
- Other means of grounding like using a plug with only the ground wire connected. Plug into local outlet and other end wired to inverter chasis?
- The wire provided for connection from battery to inverter is #4AWG, 600V, 105 degree C, VW-1. 2000W/10VDC(minimum inverter source voltage)=200Amps. This seems a little small for the ampacity.
- The wire is also not marked as being UL., nor is the inverter. Is this a problem?
Thank you!