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Re: [RFI] Inverters?

To: "rfi@contesting.com" <rfi@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [RFI] Inverters?
From: Grant Saviers <grants2@pacbell.net>
Date: Mon, 21 Sep 2020 10:24:26 -0700
List-post: <mailto:rfi@contesting.com>
Adding my 2c.

The makers of inexpensive generators obviously want to advertise the maximum power capacity. That means 100% loading of the motor hp, 3600rpm operation, maximum power output of the alternator or generator, and maximum temperature on all components, windings, and inductors. And the minimum amount of copper, iron, and magnets in the gen/alt. Hence, short life, poor winding balance, no reserve spinning or engine power, and high distortion of the AC waveform. I've seen UGLY generator AC waveforms and experienced dangerous split phase voltage unbalance.

We did a deep dive test and deconstruction of a inverter Harbor Freight 3.5kw "Predator" (aptly named) competitor to the Honda EU3000. Overall impressive. At 3kw load, good output waveform, 60KHz switching IIRC, excellent 60Hz stability (why not with a crystal osc clock?), and some headroom in the DC filter bank voltage at max load. Suspect was the 16ga winding (ampacity) of the 2 toroid output filter, but the cores measured about right for the Bmax magnetics needed (we did not destruct them). The electronics are mostly potted. The alternator rotor/stator are well constructed, balanced, and uses ferrite magnets. It is battery start and the starter + supplied battery was up to the task.

The plastic injection molding and die cast Al tooling is impressive, but we can't speak to the durability/reliability of the engine. The HF manual strongly advises about a proper break in.

The engine went to a friend for teardown to teach his kids about gas engines. Some other parts went into a project we are doing and this was the cheapest way to get them. Everything else went into recycle.

Others have reported on youtube that the HF is slightly quieter than the Honda. I have seen HF advice that maximum continuous output should not exceed 2500w. Seems ok from what was observed, but I would derate most any consumer portable gen about 50% for average continuous loading.

A friend also investigated if his EU3000 would start a 14kbtu AC. It did, but every AC is different for max start power and worse for hot restart. So a one off success. I have not been able to test the HF with an 8kbtu RV AC, tbd. (I bought a second one for my RV). Some day I'll test for RFI, but from the AC waveform continuity and minimal spikes, think it will be ok. Still it will have a CM choke and commercial line filter. (my first "green wire" CM noise problem was with a disk drive I was designing in 1969).

So, this was an interesting experience w.r.t. how Honda is a target. HF Predator 3.5kw about $800, Honda EU3000 about $2100. Except for the starter design, the Honda manual can be used to service the HF. Also, shows how far HF has come up in product quality, perhaps now less deserving of the Harbor Fright put-down.

I have no commercial affiliation.

Grant KZ1W


On 9/21/2020 04:57, Hare, Ed W1RFI wrote:
When QST reviewed generators a few years back, we noticed a wide range in the 
stability of the motor speed and thus voltage vs load. For some, when we keyed 
a kW amplifier, the motor speed remained pretty steady. For others, the motor 
speed dropped significantly, then picked up, but during the drop, the voltage 
dropped as low as 60V from a 120V generator.  If the amp remained keyed, the 
motor picked up speed again, but then when unkeyed, the speed and voltage rose. 
 This would be a show stopper for high-power portable operations.


________________________________
From: RFI <rfi-bounces+w1rfi=arrl.org@contesting.com> on behalf of Jim Brown 
<jim@audiosystemsgroup.com>
Sent: Sunday, September 20, 2020 11:45 PM
To: rfi@contesting.com <rfi@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [RFI] Inverters?

Hi Warren,

Several observations. First, buying ANY generator for anything more than
FD operation should be done as an engineering project. Some of the
design criteria are

1) what are your loads? Grab a clamp-on Ammeter and measured them --
don't go by nameplate, which are always worst case. Don't have a
clamp-on ammeter? It's a VERY important tool to own. Look for one that
measures relatively SMALL currents -- you want 5-10A full scale, maybe
20A or 30A. Unless you're seeing very large loads, nothing more than 50A.

2) Our average load 24/7 is less than 1kW; it goes up (a lot) when
cooking with electricity, running A/C, contesting legal limit, and a
bit with large fans that are part of an HVAC system.

3) Does your gen need to run well motors? My EU6500 Honda (inverter) gen
does NOT like to run my well motors. A traditional gen half that size will.

4) How much of your loads need to be on gen? I found that I could run my
22 cu ft fridge, computers, lighting, and moderate size home
entertainment system on my Honda 2000i in economode. To do that, I had
to have some of those loads redistributed between legs of 120/240 so
that all I needed for those functions were on the same leg. Easy to do
at the breaker panel. Our cooking is propane, so I boil water for coffee
on the stove when on the gen. Don't try to run the microwave.

5) Consider propane. My EU6500 has been converted, W6GJB converted his
2000i, and is going to do mine. A $22 can runs 20 hours or more in
economode, depending on loading.

6) Doing county expeditions in very quiet places for CQP and 7QP using
W6GJB's 2-position contesting trailer with antennas on a pneumatic mast
and the gen on the back of the pickup it's hitched to, we found that we
needed a good noise filter. The one that Glen and I came up with was
added to the Handbook a few years ago. If it's not in yours, you can
find details in the latest version of k9yc.com/RFI-Ham.pdf  I should
plug directly into the gen -- it's the AC cable that radiates noise
common mode, the filter kills that.

This filter is designed for HF; for 6M and above, see my recent
recommendations for coax TX chokes for VHF/UHF, using them as a
guideline for AC cable the size of the coax in those recommendations.
For 6M, use two turns of RG8 through a Fair-Rite #31 1-in i.d. clamp-on;
for best suppression, use 2-4 of these 2-turn chokes in series. See the
photo in the pdf.

7) As others have noted, consider duty cycle. Most low cost gens, even
the good ones, are designed for intermittent operation. My most
demanding need when on geen is keeping the fridge cold enough to prevent
spoiling. When running the 2000i, I typically keep the duty cycle below
60%.

8) It's important to realize that worst case loads are usually starting
a motor; once the motor is running, the load drops a LOT. It's starting
my well motors that the EU6500 doesn't like. When in doubt, START your
gen with no load on it, then connect the load, and once it's stabilized
(usually under a minute, could be more with well motors), then kick it
down to economode to save (a lot of) fuel.

Master DXpeditioner AA7JV, drastically reduced the amount of petrol he
had to carry on the boat for his trips by using power amps that could
run on batteries that were float-charged by the generators running in
economode. George is a VERY smart engineer, and one of my heroes!

73, Jim K9YC

On 9/19/2020 9:23 PM, Warren Wolff via RFI wrote:
    I am considering the purchase of an emergency back-upgenerator.  For the first time, I have encountered unitstagged 
as “inverters”.  Does this mean that some systemsare AC generators while the “Inverter-types” 
generateDC and then convert it to AC?    “Inverter” immediatelyprecipitates the worry of RFI.  Comments, 
please.
WarrenW7WY
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