tallgirl
Senior Member
- Location
- Glendale, WI
- Occupation
- Controls Systems firmware engineer
During a recent conversation about some power management glarp I've been working on, I had a question about transfer switches that I couldn't answer and couldn't find an answer for anywhere. I'm going to give me as an example, but I'm not going to run out and do this ...
As y'all may remember, I've gotten into this "Solar Power" thing and I've been working with some people on renewable energy issues. One thing that comes up is the difference between running AC inverters through a "critical loads" panel (just the stuff you want during a power outage) and what I've done, which is oversize the inverters so I can run my house on batteries.
In my case, I know from a huge amount of data logging that my peak current is about 30A per leg for a 60A subpanel. It's 27A on the A leg and 31A on the B leg. I could even tell you the exact second that happen, but I digress.
The hardware I personally have a 50A output limit. I knew people who've run air conditioning on identical equipment, but it seems both stupid and a waste of batteries. But for the sake of discussion, let's assume I wanted to have an air conditioning condensor on a transfer switch so that normally the condensor is fed directly from the utility, but if it's hot, miserable, and I wanted to run the A/C on batteries, I'd just flip the transfer switch (so this is obviously a manual switch) and that would be that. What is the code section that would even cover such a thing? Is it the usual "Separately Derived Power" parts of the code?
As y'all may remember, I've gotten into this "Solar Power" thing and I've been working with some people on renewable energy issues. One thing that comes up is the difference between running AC inverters through a "critical loads" panel (just the stuff you want during a power outage) and what I've done, which is oversize the inverters so I can run my house on batteries.
In my case, I know from a huge amount of data logging that my peak current is about 30A per leg for a 60A subpanel. It's 27A on the A leg and 31A on the B leg. I could even tell you the exact second that happen, but I digress.
The hardware I personally have a 50A output limit. I knew people who've run air conditioning on identical equipment, but it seems both stupid and a waste of batteries. But for the sake of discussion, let's assume I wanted to have an air conditioning condensor on a transfer switch so that normally the condensor is fed directly from the utility, but if it's hot, miserable, and I wanted to run the A/C on batteries, I'd just flip the transfer switch (so this is obviously a manual switch) and that would be that. What is the code section that would even cover such a thing? Is it the usual "Separately Derived Power" parts of the code?