Eshal
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Then when will it get shut off?It does not shut off when the battery voltage gets low enough to damage the battery.
The datasheets for the CD4047 and LM358 show that they still work when their supply has dropped to 3V. But the output high of the LM358 is about 1.5V less than its supply. The output transistors, driver transistors and pre-driver transistors each have a base-emitter voltage drop so the total of the voltage drops is 3.6V at low currents. Then the battery voltage will drop to about 3.6V when the load will no longer be be powered but the circuit will still be oscillating. I do not know the minimum allowed voltage for a "deep discharge" 12V lead-acid battery. EDIT: A battery manufacturer says below 10.3V it does not produce much power.Then when will it get shut off?
Is it able to run to ceiling fan nearly in good condition with low or no noise?It is a lousy circuit anyway since its output is a squarewave that many modern products cannot use because they rely on the higher peak voltage of a sinewave.
Sorry but at the output we are getting sinewave. Do you think we need to regulate it? I mean in AC to DC converter we have a regulator circuit for DC. But here is Sinvewave, do we need regulator?Since the output voltage is not regulated
My ceiling fan runs perfectly and quietly from the sinewave mains electricity that has good voltage regulation. I never tried it with an inverter. Which inverter circuit? You posted two circuits and I also posted two circuits. All four circuits produce a squarewave with no voltage regulation.Is it able to run to ceiling fan nearly in good condition with low or no noise?
All four circuits in this thread produce a squarewave, not a sinewave. Maybe without a load the voltage overshoots into something like a sinewave.Sorry but at the output we are getting sinewave.
Most inverters that are manufactured do not have a squarewave output, they have a sinewave or a modified sinewave and most have output voltage regulation using feedback.Do you think we need to regulate it? I mean in AC to DC converter we have a regulator circuit for DC. But here is Sinvewave, do we need regulator?
Go to www.batteryuniversity.com and read about lead acid batteries. There is a car starter battery that is designed to produce massive current for a few seconds and there is a deep discharge (deep cycle) battery that is used to provide a moderate amount of current for a long duration used in wheelchairs or to power an inverter. If the output power from an inverter is 500W then it draws about 600W from the battery with the extra 100W heating the inverter, battery and wires. 600W/12V= 50A. A pretty big and expensive battery is rated at about 60Ah then it can produce 3A for 20 hours or produce 60A for maybe 15 minutes.Finally, which battery should I use and how much Amperes' battery? Does car battery of 12V is enough? But tell me the amperes of the battery so that I could buy.
Is it able to run to ceiling fan nearly in good condition with low or no noise?
Finally, which battery should I use and how much Amperes' battery? Does car battery of 12V is enough? But tell me the amperes of the battery so that I could buy.
Pleas don´t be angry about criticism, see it as a help.Please don't criticise.
@iamthegospel
Sorry but you are not the gospel :-o
It would be much difficult to reverse engineered the PCB design. Right?
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