Middle one is 2KW not 0.2 KWThe question is, why does the AC outlet plug cover in his Grenadier say 0.2 kW max and 0.4 kW max. The picture he took is from the outlet in the cargo area I believe, why does the cover give 2 max numbers?
That is a US 5-15r socket with a label reading 2000w. a 15a circuit has a peak of 1800w. By any "reasonable" man standard one could use that receptacle and expect it to run a 1200w coffee pot without damage to the truck or the pot. There's nothing to spoon feed. It is 100% labeled wrong for this country, which is frankly amazing considering the liability.I'd just pull the panel off.
Nothing to be frightened of.
Or just wait to be spoonfed.
Middle one what? There's only room for one ac receptacle under that plate.Middle one is 2KW not 0.2 KW
Top one is 2.4VA/KW or 2,400 volt amps or 2,400 watts
Interesting and I think you are on the right trackThe labeling is idiotic.
In the US the typical receptacles seen are 5-15 r, (to verts and a ground) and a 5-20 R (vert, vert/horiz, ground). The 5-20 is dual use for 15 and 20a residential receptacles, as NEC permit the placement of 15 amp appliances on 20a circuits.
For discussion sake, continuous duty on all ac circuits is rated at 80%. Read that as including lighting loads and battery chargers. Intermittent use, like a saw, can be 100%. Your 200a main breaker panel in your house is 160a continuous rated. You can get 100% rated breakers, but it's cost prohibitive and generally pointless.
All ratings on inverters and generators are nominal. 2000w could mean there's a transformer that becomes saturated at 2000w, and inrush current's like motors, will eventually kill it by cooking the windings. It could mean its sized so that's the 80% load and its a 2500w transformer. That part is up to the manufacturer and ought to be in the literature. I know this will come as a shock, but, there is a lot of crap sold that doesn't really do what it says, and more $$ for a known brand is your safest bet.
My EE has a gig doing forensic fire insurance investigations. A typical house fire is a 20a branch circuit (16a continuous) with a 15a chinese power strip (12a continuous, assuming they actually tested it and put in material thats even that good) loaded to 21a on a non AFCI breaker (breakers are nominal and don't always trip at the rating), the internal meltdown causing a high impedance short, that creates a spot of intense heat without tripping the breaker, and poof, 3 dead kids on christmas morning. Insurance companies are not big fans of devises like this, for obvious reasons.
As to that labeling without any literature, well, if you don't like your grenadier, you could easily rig that to burn the damn thing to the ground with a higher load than 400w, and you'd get refund. That CLEARLY states 2000w max.
Sorry I should have been clearerMiddle one what? There's only room for one ac receptacle under that plate.
I just looked at an old thread. They are showing one in the back and one by the rear seats. So they are different wattage but they use the same cover plate? That doesn't solve the labeling issue.
Where are you getting this data?
An IA employee who has used it for such, but of course, please double check everything, until someone actually confirms the available power output (either by a sticker on the unit, DC fuse rating, AC load testing), it is somewhat inconclusiveAre you sure about that? That's not in the owner's manual (400W is). Where do you get your information?
But why are you adding them?
I'm not being defensive when I say I'm not sure whats behind. When I'm in Europe I'm a little amazed at what passes as a code compliant assembly. It all looks rather shoddy actually.Interesting and I think you are on the right track
Sadly american wiring is about 50 years behind the rest of the modern world.
Due to the fact you use 120V your current is twice as high as the rest of the world for the same load.
Someone that knows the answer as a fact please tell me what wattage I can pull from this outlet.
View attachment 7849869
Based on the size of the wiring, I'm leaning 2000w not 400w; 400w would only draw about 35-40A max, which on a 5ft run should only warrant ~12AWG wire; 200A load should warrant 2AWG wireView attachment 7849925
This is what you’re looking for. I totally forgot to check out the specs when I was in there on Friday. A 10mm socket and t40 torx if I remember correctly and 5 minutes should give everyone an answer.
I like where you put the weboost. I was wondering where I was going to hide it.View attachment 7849925
This is what you’re looking for. I totally forgot to check out the specs when I was in there on Friday. A 10mm socket and t40 torx if I remember correctly and 5 minutes should give everyone an answer.
As long as the engine is running, absolutely (even with a single battery). Without it running you could operate a 2KW load for about 12-14 minutes before your battery voltage gets to "damage" levels (50% state of charge on a EFB or AGM)Forgive my ignorance, but is the standard dual battery configuration even capable of continuously running a 2000w inverter?
Sorry I guess I wasn't totally clear on which panel I was referring, the panel I was discussing is the large plastic panel that hides that actual inverter (Not the small panel that exposes the socket itself). Removing this large panel is what hides the electrical and other such fixings and would show that actual inverter itself.The photo is of the panel with the socket. That’s all that’s labeled on it.
Just look up something like this on the interwebs.Forgive my ignorance, but is the standard dual battery configuration even capable of continuously running a 2000w inverter?
The documentation does not address whether or not there is 2kw there, if it does, show me? it says there's 400w power takeoff which the 400w takeoff plug is located on the outside of that enclosure and is DC based. So tell me since you know, if the outside if a 400w dc based plug that's addressed in the manual and here is a 2.4kw plug that isn't (120v x 20A which is labeled on the plug), is there a 2kw? I'm happy to keep amusing you as you are me right now.I find it amusing that @FlyingTexan asks a question, refuses to look up documentation (that may or may not answer his question) then complains that no one is answering his question…If no one can provide the answer you are looking for do your own work and find out.