BackFortyPower.com · Inverter Sizing Guide

Off-Grid Inverter Sizing Starts With What Runs At The Same Time.

Learn how to size an off-grid inverter using running watts, startup surge, simultaneous loads, voltage needs, pumps, refrigerators, freezers, tools, inverter-chargers, generator charging, and safety-first system planning.

Running Watts
Startup Surge
Simultaneous Loads
Voltage Planning

What An Inverter Actually Does

An Inverter Turns Stored Battery Power Into Usable Household Power.

In an off-grid system, batteries store DC power. Many common appliances, tools, chargers, pumps, and household devices need AC power. The inverter is the equipment that makes that conversion possible.

Inverter Basics

The Inverter Is The Bridge Between The Battery Bank And The Loads You Want To Run.

A battery bank may store plenty of energy, but the inverter determines whether that stored energy can actually power the equipment connected to the system at the same time.

01

Batteries Store DC Power

Off-grid batteries store direct current power. Battery voltage, chemistry, and usable capacity affect the storage side of the system.

02

The Inverter Converts DC To AC

The inverter converts battery power into AC power so common appliances, chargers, tools, and devices can run.

03

Loads Demand Running Watts

The inverter must supply the normal operating wattage of the devices that may run at the same time.

04

Some Loads Demand Surge Watts

Motor-driven loads may need extra startup power for a short time before settling into normal running wattage.

Best Practice: Think of the battery bank as the fuel tank and the inverter as the engine that delivers usable power to the loads. A large fuel tank does not help if the engine cannot handle the load.

Planning Tip: Do not choose an inverter until you know the loads that may run together and whether any of them have startup surge.

Continue To Running And Surge Watts

Running Watts Vs. Surge Watts

Running Watts Tell You Normal Demand. Surge Watts Tell You Startup Demand.

An inverter must support both the loads that run continuously and the short bursts of power needed by certain motors, compressors, pumps, refrigerators, freezers, air conditioners, and tools when they start.

Core Inverter Difference

A Load Can Be Easy To Run After Startup But Hard To Start.

This is why some buyers choose an inverter that looks large enough on paper but still cannot start a refrigerator, well pump, air conditioner, compressor, or power tool.

Running Watts

The Normal Operating Load

Running watts describe the power a device uses while operating normally. Lights, routers, chargers, laptops, and many small electronics often have steady running watt needs.

Surge Watts

The Short Startup Demand

Surge watts describe the short burst of power some loads need when starting. This can be much higher than the normal running wattage.

Basic Inverter Check
Highest Simultaneous Running Watts + Highest Surge Event = Inverter Stress Point

Example: 1,200W of running loads plus a pump startup surge may require a much larger inverter than 1,200W alone suggests.

Running Load 1,200W Example loads already operating normally.
Startup Event Surge A motor load starts while other loads are running.
Inverter Check Required Continuous and surge ratings both matter.
Load Type Running Watts Concern Surge Watts Concern Planning Reminder
LED Lights Usually low and steady. Usually not a major surge concern. Still include lights in simultaneous running watts.
Internet Router Low steady load but often critical. Usually not a major surge concern. Small loads matter when they run all day.
Refrigerator Or Freezer Moderate running load. Compressor startup can be much higher. Check product specs and inverter surge rating.
Water Pump Can be moderate to high while running. Startup can be a major inverter stress point. Do not guess on pump startup requirements.
Power Tools Or Compressor Can be high while operating. Startup may exceed smaller inverter capability. Workshop systems need special surge review.
Best Practice: Check the inverter’s continuous output rating and surge rating separately. A large battery does not guarantee the inverter can start motor-driven loads.

Planning Tip: Running watts show normal demand. Surge watts show startup stress. A serious inverter plan needs both.

Continue To Simultaneous Loads

Simultaneous Loads

Inverter Sizing Depends On What Runs Together, Not Everything You Own.

The inverter does not need to run every appliance, tool, charger, pump, and comfort load at the exact same moment unless that is how the system will actually be used. A smarter plan identifies the realistic high-demand load group.

Load Group Planning

Find The Highest Realistic Group Of Loads That May Run At The Same Time.

This prevents two common mistakes: undersizing the inverter because surge and overlap were ignored, or oversizing the inverter because every possible load was added together even though they will not all run together.

Simultaneous Load Formula
Realistic Running Load Group + Surge Review = Inverter Planning Target

Example: Refrigerator + water pump + lights + router + laptop may be a realistic simultaneous group. A microwave, circular saw, and air conditioner may not belong in the same group unless they will truly run together.

Always-On Loads Include Routers, refrigeration cycles, standby loads, and essential lighting.
Occasional Loads Schedule Microwaves, tools, pumps, and appliances may be managed by timing.
Surge Loads Review Motors and compressors may stress the inverter during startup.
Load Group Example Loads Planning Meaning Inverter Concern
Critical Baseline Refrigerator, freezer, router, lights, phone charging These loads may need to operate during normal use or backup conditions. Usually moderate running watts, but refrigeration may add surge.
Water System Moment Water pump plus existing baseline loads The pump may start while other loads are already running. Pump startup surge can drive inverter sizing.
Kitchen Or Comfort Moment Microwave, coffee maker, small appliance, fan, lights Convenience loads can be scheduled to avoid stacking demand. High running watts may exceed smaller inverters.
Workshop Moment Tool charger, lights, saw, compressor, dust collection Tool use can create short high-demand periods. Motors and compressors need careful surge review.
Home Backup Moment Critical circuits, refrigeration, sump pump, internet, lighting Backup systems need realistic priority loads, not whole-home assumptions. Transfer equipment and permanent wiring require professional review.
Best Practice: Create two lists: loads that must run together, and loads that can be scheduled. Smart load scheduling can reduce inverter size, battery stress, and system cost.

Planning Tip: The strongest inverter estimate comes from realistic simultaneous loads, not a random total of every device on the property.

Continue To Motor And Tool Surge

Motor Loads And Startup Surge

Motors, Pumps, Compressors, Refrigerators, And Tools Need Extra Inverter Attention.

Many inverter sizing problems start with motor-driven equipment. These loads may run at one wattage but briefly demand much more power when they start, especially when other loads are already running.

High-Risk Load Types

Motor Loads Can Make A Reasonable Inverter Plan Fail During Startup.

A refrigerator, freezer, pump, compressor, air conditioner, or shop tool may not draw extreme power once it is running, but startup surge can temporarily push the inverter beyond its limits.

Pumps

Water Pumps Can Be Inverter Stress Points.

Well pumps, transfer pumps, booster pumps, and sump pumps can create high startup demand. Pump voltage, horsepower, pressure, and starting method all matter.

Refrigeration

Refrigerators And Freezers Cycle On And Off.

These loads may start automatically while other loads are running, so the inverter needs enough surge capacity for real-world timing.

Compressors

Air Compressors And AC Units Need Careful Review.

Compressors can have demanding startup behavior. Smaller off-grid systems often struggle when compressor loads are added casually.

Tools

Workshop Loads Can Stack Quickly.

Saws, grinders, chargers, dust collection, and compressors may create a short but intense inverter demand during tool use.

Motor Load Planning Check
Existing Running Loads + Motor Startup Surge = Real Inverter Test

Example: A pump may start while lights, router, refrigerator, and chargers are already running. That moment matters more than the pump’s running watts alone.

Load Type Why It Matters What To Check Planning Warning
Well Or Water Pump Pumps can create large startup demand and may require specific voltage. Horsepower, running watts, starting amps, voltage, pump controller specs. Do not guess on pump surge. This is often a major inverter sizing driver.
Refrigerator Or Freezer Compressors cycle automatically and can start while other loads are running. Running watts, startup surge, defrost cycles, efficiency rating, inverter compatibility. Small daily energy use does not eliminate startup surge concerns.
Air Compressor Compressors can be hard to start and may overwhelm smaller inverters. Motor size, startup amps, running watts, tank pressure, duty cycle. Workshop systems should not be sized from lighting and chargers alone.
Air Conditioner AC loads can combine high running demand with compressor startup surge. BTU size, inverter compatibility, soft-start options, running watts, surge behavior. Cooling loads can quickly push a small off-grid system beyond practical limits.
Power Tools Tools may have intermittent but high starting and operating demand. Tool wattage, startup behavior, simultaneous tool use, charger loads. Tool use should be scheduled and reviewed separately from household loads.
Best Practice: For motor loads, use real manufacturer specifications whenever possible. Generic online wattage charts are useful for early estimates, but they are not enough for final inverter selection.

Planning Tip: Motor-driven loads deserve special attention because they can make an inverter fail even when the running-watt math looks acceptable.

Continue To Inverter Waveform

Pure Sine Wave Vs. Modified Sine Wave

Inverter Waveform Can Affect How Well Your Equipment Runs.

Not all inverters deliver power the same way. Pure sine wave inverters are generally the better choice for sensitive electronics, modern appliances, motor loads, chargers, refrigerators, freezers, tools, and long-term off-grid planning.

Waveform Planning

Pure Sine Wave Is Usually The Safer Default For Serious Off-Grid Systems.

Modified sine wave inverters may be cheaper, but the lower upfront cost can create compatibility problems, extra heat, noise, poor performance, or reduced equipment life with certain loads.

Pure Sine Wave

Cleaner Power For More Equipment

Pure sine wave inverters are designed to provide power that more closely matches utility-style AC power. They are generally preferred for electronics, appliances, motors, battery chargers, refrigerators, freezers, and more demanding off-grid systems.

Modified Sine Wave

Lower Cost, More Limitations

Modified sine wave inverters may work with some simple resistive loads, but they can be a poor fit for sensitive electronics, motor-driven loads, some chargers, and equipment that expects cleaner AC power.

Load Type Pure Sine Wave Fit Modified Sine Wave Concern Buyer Reminder
Laptops, Routers, And Electronics Usually the preferred choice for cleaner power. May cause noise, heat, charging issues, or compatibility problems. Do not risk expensive electronics to save a little on inverter cost.
Refrigerators And Freezers Generally better for compressor loads and long-term reliability. May run poorly, hotter, noisier, or less efficiently depending on the appliance. Refrigeration is often critical, so inverter quality matters.
Pumps And Motors Usually better for motor performance and compatibility. Motors may run hotter, louder, or less efficiently. Motor loads already need surge review, so waveform should not be ignored.
Battery Chargers And Tool Chargers Often the safer compatibility choice. Some chargers may not work correctly or may overheat. Check charger manufacturer guidance when possible.
Simple Resistive Loads Works well. May work for certain simple loads. Even if one load works, the whole system may still justify pure sine wave.
Best Practice: For cabins, RVs, workshops, backup systems, and serious off-grid use, pure sine wave should usually be treated as the default unless there is a very specific reason to choose otherwise.

Planning Tip: Inverter size matters, but inverter quality and waveform matter too. Do not compare inverters by watts alone.

Continue To Voltage Planning

120V, 240V, Split-Phase, And Voltage Planning

Voltage Requirements Can Change The Entire Inverter Plan.

Some small off-grid systems only need standard 120V power. Other systems may need 240V, split-phase output, larger inverter-charger equipment, transfer equipment, or professional electrical design because of pumps, tools, HVAC loads, or building wiring.

Voltage Planning

Before Choosing An Inverter, Confirm What Voltage Your Loads Actually Require.

A small plug-in system may only need 120V AC output. But well pumps, larger shop tools, some HVAC equipment, and home-backup circuits may require 240V or split-phase planning.

120V Loads

Common Plug-In Power

Many small appliances, lights, routers, chargers, laptops, refrigerators, and RV or cabin loads may use standard 120V power.

240V Loads

Higher-Demand Equipment

Some well pumps, shop tools, HVAC equipment, and larger appliances may need 240V power. These loads require careful inverter and wiring review.

Split-Phase Systems

Building-Style Power Planning

Some home-backup and cabin systems may require split-phase inverter equipment to support both 120V and 240V loads correctly.

Voltage Situation Common Use Case Planning Meaning Buyer Warning
120V Only Small cabins, RVs, portable systems, light backup loads, basic appliances Often simpler than split-phase or 240V systems. Still check continuous watts, surge watts, pure sine wave output, and safe connections.
240V Load Present Well pump, certain tools, larger appliances, some HVAC equipment The inverter plan must support the voltage required by the actual load. Do not assume a standard 120V inverter can run a 240V load.
120V And 240V Needed Cabin panels, home backup, larger workshop, multi-circuit systems May require split-phase inverter equipment or properly designed system architecture. Professional review is strongly recommended when building wiring is involved.
Portable Power Station Use Plug-in loads, camping, RV support, small emergency backup Most are limited to certain output voltages and outlet types. Check whether the unit supports the load voltage before buying.
Generator And Inverter-Charger Use Hybrid off-grid systems, backup charging, permanent cabin or home systems Voltage compatibility between generator, inverter-charger, battery bank, and loads matters. Do not mix equipment without confirming compatibility and safety requirements.
Best Practice: Identify voltage needs before buying the inverter. A system that needs 240V, split-phase output, or building integration should be reviewed by a qualified professional before equipment is purchased.

Planning Tip: Voltage requirements should be confirmed early, especially for pumps, workshops, HVAC equipment, home backup, and permanent cabin systems.

Continue To Inverter Examples

Inverter Size Examples

Inverter Examples Help Turn Load Theory Into Real Planning Scenarios.

These examples are not final electrical designs. They are planning scenarios that show how cabins, RVs, workshops, and backup systems can require different inverter decisions based on simultaneous loads, surge demand, voltage needs, and safety requirements.

Use-Case Planning

The Right Inverter Depends On What The System Must Actually Run.

A weekend cabin, RV, small workshop, and home backup system may all use an inverter, but they do not have the same load mix, surge risk, voltage requirements, or installation path.

Cabin Example

Small Cabin With Essential Loads

A cabin inverter may need to support lights, refrigerator, router, phone charging, laptop, small kitchen loads, and possibly a water pump.

  • Identify refrigerator, pump, and kitchen surge loads.
  • Separate critical loads from comfort loads.
  • !
    Well pumps may change voltage and surge planning.
RV Or Van Example

Mobile System With Smaller Loads

An RV or van inverter often supports chargers, small appliances, fans, laptops, lights, and occasional kitchen loads while balancing space, battery size, and recharge limits.

  • Use load scheduling to avoid unnecessary inverter size.
  • Check appliance wattage before assuming compatibility.
  • !
    Portable systems still have inverter output limits.
Workshop Example

Tools, Chargers, And Motor Loads

A workshop inverter may face short but demanding loads from saws, grinders, compressors, battery chargers, dust collection, and lighting.

  • Review tool startup surge before choosing equipment.
  • Do not run every high-draw tool at the same time.
  • !
    Compressors can become the hardest load to start.
Backup Example

Home Or Property Backup Loads

A backup inverter may need to support refrigeration, communication, sump pump, water system, lighting, medical equipment, or selected critical circuits.

  • Choose critical circuits before choosing equipment.
  • Review transfer equipment and building wiring safety.
  • !
    Whole-home assumptions can oversize or misdirect the plan.
Use Case Typical Inverter Concern Likely Stress Point Voltage Concern Best Next Question
Cabin Refrigeration, lighting, router, charging, water pump, small appliances Pump or refrigerator startup while other loads are running May be 120V only or may require 240V for certain pumps What loads may run when the pump or refrigerator starts?
RV Or Van Small appliances, chargers, laptops, fans, lights, portable comfort loads High-draw kitchen appliances or stacked loads Usually 120V AC output, but system details vary Which loads can be scheduled instead of stacked?
Workshop Tools, compressors, chargers, lighting, dust collection Motor startup, compressor startup, or tool overlap Some tools may require 240V Which tool creates the highest startup demand?
Home Backup Critical circuits, refrigeration, sump pump, communication, water, medical needs Automatic pump, compressor, or refrigeration startup during outage use May require split-phase or transfer-equipment planning Which circuits are truly critical during an outage?
Best Practice: Use examples to frame the decision, not to pick an inverter blindly. Final inverter selection should be checked against real load specs, surge requirements, voltage needs, manufacturer guidance, and safety review.

Planning Tip: A useful inverter example starts with the real use case, then checks simultaneous loads, surge demand, voltage, waveform, and safety requirements.

Continue To Inverter-Chargers

Inverter-Chargers And Generator Charging

Some Inverters Can Also Charge Batteries From A Generator Or Shore Power.

An inverter turns battery power into AC power. An inverter-charger can also use an AC source, such as a generator or shore power, to recharge the battery bank. That makes it important for cabins, RVs, workshops, and backup systems where solar alone may not always recover the batteries fast enough.

Hybrid Charging Planning

An Inverter-Charger Connects The Battery Bank, AC Loads, And Backup Charging Source.

Inverter-chargers are common in more capable off-grid systems because they can power loads from the battery bank and help recharge that battery bank when a generator or shore-power source is available.

Inverter Mode

Battery Power Becomes Usable AC Power.

The inverter side supports the loads from the battery bank. Continuous output, surge output, waveform, voltage, and wiring method still matter.

Charger Mode

Generator Or Shore Power Recharges The Battery Bank.

The charger side uses an AC input source to help refill the batteries. Charging settings must match battery chemistry, voltage, current limits, and manufacturer guidance.

Transfer Function

Some Systems Can Pass AC Power Through.

Depending on equipment design, some inverter-chargers can transfer AC input to loads while also charging batteries, but this must be planned correctly.

Generator Fit

The Generator Must Match The System Needs.

Generator size, voltage, waveform quality, output stability, fuel use, runtime, and charging current all affect how well generator charging works.

Simple Inverter-Charger Flow
Generator Or Shore Power → Inverter-Charger → Battery Bank And AC Loads

This can be a strong backup strategy when solar production is limited, but it requires equipment compatibility and safe installation planning.

Planning Area Why It Matters What To Check Buyer Warning
Battery Chemistry Charging profiles must match the battery type. LiFePO4, AGM, flooded lead-acid settings, voltage limits, charge current, BMS guidance. Wrong charging settings can damage batteries or reduce battery life.
Generator Compatibility The generator must support the charger load and system voltage. Generator watts, voltage, frequency, output quality, fuel runtime, and surge behavior. A generator that is too small or unstable may not charge properly.
Charging Current Battery banks have limits on how fast they should be charged. Manufacturer charge-current limits, inverter-charger settings, cable sizing, and protection. Faster charging is not automatically safer or better.
AC Pass-Through Some systems can feed loads while charging batteries. Pass-through rating, transfer behavior, connected loads, generator capacity, and wiring method. Do not assume every inverter-charger handles pass-through the same way.
Permanent Installation Cabin, workshop, and home backup wiring creates safety and code concerns. Transfer equipment, grounding, bonding, disconnects, overcurrent protection, permits, and qualified review. Improvised generator-to-building connections are dangerous.
Best Practice: Treat generator charging as part of the system design, not an afterthought. The inverter-charger, battery bank, generator, wiring, protection, and load plan all need to work together.

Planning Tip: An inverter-charger can be valuable when solar alone is not enough, but it must be matched to the batteries, generator, voltage, wiring, and safety requirements.

Continue To Common Inverter Mistakes

Common Inverter Sizing Mistakes

Most Inverter Mistakes Come From Sizing By Watts Alone.

A large wattage number can still be the wrong inverter if surge capacity, waveform, voltage, simultaneous loads, generator charging, battery compatibility, and safety requirements are ignored.

01

Using Daily Watt-Hours To Size The Inverter

Daily watt-hours help estimate battery and solar needs, but inverter sizing depends on what runs at one time.

Better Approach Use simultaneous running watts and startup surge to estimate inverter capacity.
02

Ignoring Startup Surge

Pumps, refrigerators, freezers, compressors, air conditioners, and tools can demand more power at startup than during normal operation.

Better Approach Check surge ratings, motor specs, startup amps, and manufacturer guidance before buying.
03

Adding Every Load Together

Adding every possible device can oversize the inverter if those loads will not realistically run at the same time.

Better Approach Separate must-run-together loads from scheduled loads and occasional comfort loads.
04

Choosing Modified Sine Wave To Save Money

Cheaper waveform can create compatibility problems with electronics, chargers, motors, refrigerators, freezers, and tools.

Better Approach Use pure sine wave as the default for serious off-grid systems and critical loads.
05

Forgetting Voltage Requirements

A 120V inverter may not support 240V pumps, tools, HVAC equipment, or split-phase building needs.

Better Approach Confirm 120V, 240V, split-phase, and battery-voltage needs before selecting equipment.
06

Treating Installation Safety As An Afterthought

Permanent systems can involve transfer equipment, grounding, bonding, overcurrent protection, disconnects, permits, and code requirements.

Better Approach Get qualified review when the system becomes permanent, powerful, generator-connected, or tied to building wiring.

Better Buyer Checklist

Before Buying An Inverter, Confirm The Real Operating Conditions.

The strongest inverter decision starts with a realistic load group, the hardest startup event, the required voltage, the proper waveform, and a safe installation path.

  • Identify the loads that may run at the same time.
  • Check startup surge for motors, pumps, compressors, refrigerators, freezers, AC units, and tools.
  • Confirm pure sine wave or modified sine wave suitability before comparing prices.
  • Confirm 120V, 240V, split-phase, battery voltage, generator charging, and system compatibility.
  • Review safety, wiring, grounding, transfer equipment, disconnects, and professional installation needs.

Planning Tip: Inverter sizing is about real operating behavior, not the biggest number on the box.

Continue To Inverter Safety Review

Inverter Safety And Professional Review

Use Inverter Sizing For Planning, Not As Final Electrical Design.

This guide helps buyers understand inverter sizing before purchasing equipment. It does not replace manufacturer instructions, electrical code, permits, inspections, utility requirements, engineering review, or qualified professional installation guidance.

Safety Boundary

Inverters Can Involve High Current, AC Output, Generator Input, Transfer Equipment, And Building-Wiring Hazards.

The larger or more permanent the inverter system becomes, the more important it is to plan wiring, overcurrent protection, disconnects, grounding, bonding, transfer equipment, ventilation, generator compatibility, labeling, and qualified review.

Plain-English Disclaimer

The BackFortyPower Inverter Sizing Guide is an educational planning resource. It is not an electrical design, installation instruction, code approval, permit document, engineering plan, or safety certification.

Use This Guide For

Planning And Buyer Education

Use it to understand inverter terminology, running watts, surge watts, waveform, voltage needs, and better questions to ask before buying.

Do Not Use This Guide For

Final Installation Decisions

Do not use it as the final source for wire sizing, breaker selection, grounding, bonding, transfer equipment, permits, or code approval.

Safety Area Why It Matters When To Get Qualified Review Do Not Guess On
AC Output Wiring Inverters can deliver household-style AC power that requires safe wiring and protection. Any permanent cabin, shed, workshop, home backup, or multi-circuit setup. Wire size, breaker size, outlet circuits, panels, grounding, and bonding.
DC Battery Wiring Battery-to-inverter wiring can involve high current and serious heat or fire risk if done incorrectly. Any larger inverter, larger battery bank, or permanent battery installation. Cable size, fuse placement, terminals, disconnects, torque, routing, and voltage drop.
Transfer Equipment Backup systems must not backfeed utility lines or unsafe circuits. Any system connected to home, cabin, shed, workshop, or critical circuits. Transfer switches, interlocks, isolation, utility separation, and code requirements.
Generator Input Generator charging and pass-through power must be compatible with inverter-charger settings and wiring. Any inverter-charger, generator-connected system, or hybrid charging system. Generator size, waveform, grounding, neutral behavior, charging current, and input protection.
Voltage And Split-Phase 120V, 240V, and split-phase systems require the correct equipment and wiring method. Any system involving pumps, large tools, HVAC, home backup, or building panels. Voltage compatibility, phase configuration, panel wiring, and equipment matching.
Best Practice: The moment an inverter system becomes permanent, powerful, generator-connected, or tied to building wiring, qualified professional review should be part of the plan.

Planning Tip: Inverter sizing helps you become a better buyer. Safe installation depends on the actual equipment, wiring method, generator input, transfer equipment, voltage, location, and professional review.

Continue To Solar Sizing

Continue To Solar Sizing

Now Match Your Load Plan To The Solar Array.

Inverter sizing answers what your system can run at one time. Solar sizing answers how much energy your system can realistically collect, how quickly the batteries can recover, and whether solar alone can keep up with your daily use.

Running Watts
Startup Surge
Voltage Planning
Next: Solar Recovery
Step One Confirm The Load Calculation And Daily Watt-Hours.
Step Two Confirm Batteries Can Support The Runtime Goal.
Step Three Confirm The Inverter Can Run And Start The Loads.
Step Four Now Size Solar For Recovery, Weather, And Real Sun Conditions.

Compare Equipment Carefully

Compare Inverters By More Than The Wattage Label.

Once you understand running watts, surge watts, waveform, voltage, generator charging, and safety requirements, you are ready to compare inverter equipment with a better buyer’s eye.

Continuous Watts
Surge Watts
Pure Sine Wave
120V / 240V Output
Inverter-Charger Capability
Battery Compatibility
Compare By Capability Look at continuous output, surge output, waveform, voltage, generator charging, and expansion path.
Compare By Compatibility Match the inverter to your battery bank, charging method, loads, wiring approach, and voltage needs.
Compare By Trust Favor clear documentation, safety listings, warranty support, real specifications, and proven supplier reliability.