As Steve said at full load you would be using 73.33333 battery amps. Just how long do you think your battery can supply 12VDC at 73 A. I believe you are battery limited, not inverter limited after a fwe short minutes under full load
No, they are designed to not exceed their output current rating - particularly on the input side - that 880 W unit is drawing 73 A from your battery already.
The answer is "no"... but i suspect you might not understand something about "CURRENT" also called "amperes". The amperes rated on any power source is the maximum available. If the device is not connected to anything, such as a light bulb or motor etc... then ZERO amperes will flow. If you connect a small light bulb, then only a small portion of the available amperes will flow... such as ONE ampere for example.
Comments
9 years ago
Thanq all .I understood it
9 years ago
Would you expect to be able to increase the top speed of your car without increasing fuel consumption?
9 years ago
As Steve said at full load you would be using 73.33333 battery amps.
Just how long do you think your battery can supply 12VDC at 73 A.
I believe you are battery limited, not inverter limited after a fwe short minutes
under full load
A.
9 years ago
No, they are designed to not exceed their output current rating - particularly on the input side - that 880 W unit is drawing 73 A from your battery already.
Steve
Answer 9 years ago
Can any other electronic device increase the current output
Answer 9 years ago
No. You are taking more power, which it cannot supply.
Steve
9 years ago
The answer is "no"... but i suspect you might not understand something about "CURRENT" also called "amperes". The amperes rated on any power source is the maximum available. If the device is not connected to anything, such as a light bulb or motor etc... then ZERO amperes will flow. If you connect a small light bulb, then only a small portion of the available amperes will flow... such as ONE ampere for example.