sharpener wrote: ↑Sun Aug 11, 2024 2:25 pm
What is the point of having two banks of 36 FETs if none of them are bolted to any kind of heat sink?
The heat sink is thermally and electrically conductively coupled to the FETs via the power bus. It's the Metal Shroud.
What can I say the inverter doesn't get hot. The overkill FETfield
is the thermal design and a reliability feature. I wonder if they hand pick them for matching RDSon...it's not easy drive that many synchronously. The fans do run when it's doing some heavy lifting...not much. I run the house on twins; 7kVA combined. It's pretty rare that they'd start to sweat.
The XTH has probably double that and iirc the heat sink is also the PCB trace which is a solid aluminium plate in places
I think the Multiplus drives 12 FETs; four banks of three parallel. I watched a promo vid where I recalled (perhaps inaccurately) they claimed 4 a long time ago. I had a look on tinternet for some pics with the wrapper off; Looks like 6 above, 6 below because it would have to be a numerator of 4.
Tinbum wrote: ↑Sun Aug 11, 2024 4:07 pm It didn't used to be the case but many rely on their past reputations that are no longer deserved.
Yurp. Couldn't agree more. BMW, Bosch, Mercedes...gone to the dawgs...
Most of my good gear is circa 2000 - 2010.
I've no interest in Apps or smartphones for that matter nor lightweight less rugged boxes I was gonna bolt to a wall anyway. It does amuse me that the Xtender is a 30yo design and it's still the most efficient on the market. All they've been doing is updating firmware since the 90s. They also changed the name from a "multimode power supply" to "hybrid inverter" to stay trendy. Impressively capable boxes.
Another thing I've observed is that the 90% efficiency is consistent across the load range. Most competitors are a lot less than the datasheet figures with low & intermediate load or high temps.