jblnut
ALLIANCE MEMBER
DeWalt makes what I'm thinking of but I own exactly nothing 20/60v DeWalt. I'm thinking of trying to make something similar to use with some Ryobi batteries I seem to have an abundance of.
I've been tossing this around for a while and keep coming back to an inverter made to go work with solar panels. Most of them are flexible on their input voltages so 18-20v DC would work great. Link to an inverter so you know WTH I'm talking about if you don't already. However most of thesec inverters call out "Please be noted, This grid tie inverter cannot be used as off grid/stand alone solar system. The output need to be connected to the grid power. Can not supply power directly to the AC loads."
Everything I've been finding wants to be tied into grid power or has a rigid advertised input voltage of 12v, 24v, 36v, etc. I'm looking for off grid use. Nothing crazy like a welder or fridge but something more like a fan or some party lights while camping. Yes, Ryobi makes a fan and it's actually quite nice but it's the idea of doing this that keeps nagging at me.
I know a little but probably not enough about Lithium batteries to make this work but it's worth a shot. When an "18v" battery is fully charged it'll be right around 20v and will slowly drain down towards 18v. This inverter would need to be able to handle that voltage drop.
Does anyone know of something out of the box that will convert 18v-20v or 36-40v DC to 120v AC ??
Anyone done this before ?? Other than Dewalt ....
I've been tossing this around for a while and keep coming back to an inverter made to go work with solar panels. Most of them are flexible on their input voltages so 18-20v DC would work great. Link to an inverter so you know WTH I'm talking about if you don't already. However most of thesec inverters call out "Please be noted, This grid tie inverter cannot be used as off grid/stand alone solar system. The output need to be connected to the grid power. Can not supply power directly to the AC loads."
Everything I've been finding wants to be tied into grid power or has a rigid advertised input voltage of 12v, 24v, 36v, etc. I'm looking for off grid use. Nothing crazy like a welder or fridge but something more like a fan or some party lights while camping. Yes, Ryobi makes a fan and it's actually quite nice but it's the idea of doing this that keeps nagging at me.
I know a little but probably not enough about Lithium batteries to make this work but it's worth a shot. When an "18v" battery is fully charged it'll be right around 20v and will slowly drain down towards 18v. This inverter would need to be able to handle that voltage drop.
Does anyone know of something out of the box that will convert 18v-20v or 36-40v DC to 120v AC ??
Anyone done this before ?? Other than Dewalt ....