ParaHandy
Well-Known Member
Re: When do you actually need true sine wave
try and jog somebody else's memory .... but here goes ... as far as i can remember, devices which present an active (eg induction) load rather than passive load (eg resistance) will cause the semi-square wave output of an inverter to overload on power-up. any electric motor would be an obvious problem particularly squirrel cage induction motors which most are.
the voltage rise of a square wave consumes instantaneous huge power in an active device whereas sine wave is a much easier monutain to climb .. if you see what i mean ...
this ought to include switched mode power supplies which have switched inductive loads in them but if that was the case, then a telly or vcr should fail to operate with an inverter since virtually all power supplies in a tv are switched mode except that the waveforms inside a tv, eg HV saw tooth, square wave flyback & sync pulses, are internally shaped by the tv's own gubbins. but surprised that the mutiple harmonic frequencies don't bugger the reception.
power tools which must have switched mode psu do fail with an inverter and sometimes catastrophically. So might be somewhere near an explanation? That might also expain the problem somebody had some time ago with using a petrol generator 240v AC output to drive a battery charger - the output would be a 'lazy' square wave which the SMPU of the charger wouldn't like ...
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try and jog somebody else's memory .... but here goes ... as far as i can remember, devices which present an active (eg induction) load rather than passive load (eg resistance) will cause the semi-square wave output of an inverter to overload on power-up. any electric motor would be an obvious problem particularly squirrel cage induction motors which most are.
the voltage rise of a square wave consumes instantaneous huge power in an active device whereas sine wave is a much easier monutain to climb .. if you see what i mean ...
this ought to include switched mode power supplies which have switched inductive loads in them but if that was the case, then a telly or vcr should fail to operate with an inverter since virtually all power supplies in a tv are switched mode except that the waveforms inside a tv, eg HV saw tooth, square wave flyback & sync pulses, are internally shaped by the tv's own gubbins. but surprised that the mutiple harmonic frequencies don't bugger the reception.
power tools which must have switched mode psu do fail with an inverter and sometimes catastrophically. So might be somewhere near an explanation? That might also expain the problem somebody had some time ago with using a petrol generator 240v AC output to drive a battery charger - the output would be a 'lazy' square wave which the SMPU of the charger wouldn't like ...
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