To keep my question simple I'm going to leave out the details of the application that I have in mind. Let's just say that I had built a nifty hybrid system that worked great, but somehow today I managed to destroy my entire battery bank (and somehow managed to live to tell about it). On this particular day Mr. Murphy is on quite a roll: the grid is down, my generator is out of fuel, the wind turbine is a tangled mess, and for whatever reason no improvement to the situation can be made for weeks.
I'd still like to run a particular load for a 1/2 hour or so whenever it is bright and sunny. I reconfigure my system as follows with everything connected in series as listed:
PV Array (suitably sized, voltage appropriate for MPPT)
Xantrex XW MPPT80 600 High Voltage Controller
Xantrex XW6048-120/240-60 Hybrid Inverter-Charger
240V Load (30A start-up, 15A steady state)
Will that system actually run while the sun is high in the sky? Or would it not run at all because (for example) the charge controller is unhappy with having zero volts across my non-existent "battery" and shuts itself down? Obviously I don't want the MPPT controller to control any charges (no batteries), I just want it to provide sufficient current/power at 48V to the inverter.
Would it make any difference if I had functionally equivalent OutBack equipment in place of the Xantrex equipment?:
PV Array (suitably sized, voltage appropriate for MPPT)
Outback Flexmax 80 Amp MPPT Solar Charge Controller
Outback Radian GS8048 8,000 Watt Inverter/Charger
240V Load (30A start-up, 15A steady state)
If none of that would work, then are there any other equipment combinations that would?
I'd still like to run a particular load for a 1/2 hour or so whenever it is bright and sunny. I reconfigure my system as follows with everything connected in series as listed:
PV Array (suitably sized, voltage appropriate for MPPT)
Xantrex XW MPPT80 600 High Voltage Controller
Xantrex XW6048-120/240-60 Hybrid Inverter-Charger
240V Load (30A start-up, 15A steady state)
Will that system actually run while the sun is high in the sky? Or would it not run at all because (for example) the charge controller is unhappy with having zero volts across my non-existent "battery" and shuts itself down? Obviously I don't want the MPPT controller to control any charges (no batteries), I just want it to provide sufficient current/power at 48V to the inverter.
Would it make any difference if I had functionally equivalent OutBack equipment in place of the Xantrex equipment?:
PV Array (suitably sized, voltage appropriate for MPPT)
Outback Flexmax 80 Amp MPPT Solar Charge Controller
Outback Radian GS8048 8,000 Watt Inverter/Charger
240V Load (30A start-up, 15A steady state)
If none of that would work, then are there any other equipment combinations that would?
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