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Overview

The objective is to supply power to the house for critical systems in the event of a power outage. We have 2.4 kW of lithium battery power and multiple inverters. Ideally, we would like to group our batteries and connect the inverter directly to the panel and select what circuits we need to power. We will be supplying only 120VAC to only 1 phase.

Inverter Connect Directly to Appliance

Here is an example of what we used initially. Just a battery and inverter independently powering our espresso machine.


Renogy Pure Since Inverter

The inverter we are using is a Renogy 3000W pure sine inverter. This inverter has ground and neutral bonded together inside the inverter. This is good when installed in a RV but won't work when tying it to your panel. 

In order to get this to work when connected to our house, we will leave the ground disconnected. The thought here is that the ground is supplied by the house which will protect our connected devices. 



Panel Rework

We moved around some circuits in the panel to ensure all critical circuits are on the same phase.  This is not important if you will power both phases.


Connecting to the Panel

To connect our inverter to the panel, we simply connected our inverter to a receptacle which was running on the desired phase (L2 in our case). Ideally, this receptacle should not be on a circuit containing a GFCI or arc fault breaker. It will still work but if the GFCI/Arc Fault trips, you won't be able to reset the circuit.



Connection Steps

  • turn off the input cuircuit on panel! (main power)
  • turn off all circuits
  • ensure all 240v breakers are OFF (we can not turn these on)
  • connect inverter to receptacle on desired phase. (Ideally a circuit not protected by a GFCI or arc fault breaker)
  • power on inverter
  • turn on critical circuits on panel.


Connecting to the Panel - Both Phases

To connect our inverter to both phases we will need to connect to two different receptacles on different phases. We will need to ensure all 240v breakers are turned off.


Connection Steps

  • turn off the input cuircuit on panel! (main power)
  • turn off all circuits
  • ensure all 240v breakers are OFF (we can not turn these on)
  • connect inverter to receptacle on each phase. (Ideally a circuit not protected by a GFCI or arc fault breaker)
  • power on inverter
  • turn on critical circuits on panel.


References

ReferenceURL
How to Power your House with an Inverter/Generator During a Power Outage Part 1/3https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yiyri0Kb9Ww
How to Power your House with an Inverter/Generator During a Power Outage Part 2/3https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-OfcgU_7Fs
How to Power your House with an Inverter/Generator During a Power Outage Part 3/3https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a5BziLclt3E&list=RDCMUCVktNhxFTBnrLfeIe1tdgSQ&index=3
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