Hello all, I have such a weird issue that is driving me NUTS and I need some input on how I can fix this. The setup is as follows:
2 LG panels connected to a Tristar MPPT CC which is then connected to the batteries and the ground terminal is connected to a ground rod at the back of the shed. The batteries are then connected to a 2000 Watt inverter. The ground terminal is grounded to the ground rod in the back of the shed as well. Everything works just fine, I'm able to to use the power in the shed for pretty much everything except charging my Plugin hybrid vehicle. On the charger for the car, it states power fault. When I check the fault it claims HIGH RESISTANCE GROUND. I then took my outlet tester and plugged it into the inverter and according to the tester I have an open ground. I don't see how this is possible because everything is grounded (inverter and charge controller). I read online that the tester is designed for household circuits and aren't meant to be used with inverters and could possibly give a false reading. Is there any way I can get this HIGH RESISTANCE GROUND issue resolved?
The goal is to basically be able to charge my car off my panels/batteries. The car chargers' specs are as follows:
IN: 120V 12.5A
OUT: 120v 12.5A
per my math which i hope is correct P=VI I need an inverter to support 1500 watts. My 2000W inverter should be enough in this case..
2 LG panels connected to a Tristar MPPT CC which is then connected to the batteries and the ground terminal is connected to a ground rod at the back of the shed. The batteries are then connected to a 2000 Watt inverter. The ground terminal is grounded to the ground rod in the back of the shed as well. Everything works just fine, I'm able to to use the power in the shed for pretty much everything except charging my Plugin hybrid vehicle. On the charger for the car, it states power fault. When I check the fault it claims HIGH RESISTANCE GROUND. I then took my outlet tester and plugged it into the inverter and according to the tester I have an open ground. I don't see how this is possible because everything is grounded (inverter and charge controller). I read online that the tester is designed for household circuits and aren't meant to be used with inverters and could possibly give a false reading. Is there any way I can get this HIGH RESISTANCE GROUND issue resolved?
The goal is to basically be able to charge my car off my panels/batteries. The car chargers' specs are as follows:
IN: 120V 12.5A
OUT: 120v 12.5A
per my math which i hope is correct P=VI I need an inverter to support 1500 watts. My 2000W inverter should be enough in this case..
Comment