I’ve added an inverter sizing calculator to my website WattBuild. The goal is to establish what devices will be used, and to calculate continuous and surge power requirements using typical loads from our device research.

Open to any feedback!

  • FauxPseudo @lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    It is a useful tool for figuring out needs based on what’s going to be running. But it seems too DIBuy instead of DIY. The results say inverters but they are all plug and play all in one systems. Not DIY.

    Now I understand that popping prebuilt systems in the results is easier than building a DB of the constantly changing variety of batteries, inverters and charge controllers. But right now it seems all buy and no build.

    • wattbuild@lemmy.worldOP
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      21 hours ago

      Interesting point, I guess DIY means something different to different people. For me, DIY means anything that doesn’t require a professional installer.

      To your point though, I do have a couple of EG4 inverters included in the results at the upper capability end. Sounds like you’d be interested in seeing more separate inverters than just those few I currently have. Adding those isn’t too difficult, I will just need to make it clear to the audience which items require additional parts to be a functioning system.

      • FauxPseudo @lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        My DIY is normally “build it from scratch” instead of “buy a thing that does it for you.”

        The way you have it listed they are all “inverters”. But an inverter is only one component of a solar system. In fact it’s not even part of a DC only system. Most of what you have are complete systems minus the solar panels. Way more than an inverter.