

Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #52446 in Lawn & Patio
- Brand: HQRP
Features
- HQRP® Grid Tie Power Inverter plus HQRP® UV Chain / UV Radiation Health Tester;
- AC output power: 500W; AC maximum output power: 500W; Recommend use solar panels: 620Wp;
- DC Maximum Input Power: 600W; Maximum input current: 30A; DC maximum voltage: 30.2V DC;
- DC voltage range: 10.5V~28VDC; AC standard voltage range: 90V-140VAC; AC frequency range: 55Hz~63Hz;
- Anti-voltage protection: Fuse. 200 days warranty!
Product Description
HQRP 500W Grid Tie MPPT Power Inverter. The grid-tie inverter transfers solar energy directly from the solar panel into the home grid, no extra equipment is needed. It controls the phase, the frequency and voltage of the power generated by the solar panel. It can be connected to any outlet (conventional network) in the home. The grid-tie inverter produces a pure sine-wave and matches that of the grid. HQRP UV Chain / UV Radiation Tester: To know the Solar UV Index, it is enough to compare the colorchange with the 4 standard colors around. Very light purple: low intensity, UV index 1-2. Sun-protection not necessary. Light purple: medium intensity, UV index 3-5. Sun-protection is recommended. Purple: strong intensity, UV index 6-7. Sun-protection is necessary. Dark purple: very strong intensity, UV index 8-11. This tester shows you the level of UV radiation and helps you protect your eyes and skin from negative sunlight effect.
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.Easy Set Up
By Andy
This made setting up a micro solar system almost too easy. People complain about the instructions but you don't even need them. Connect the wires from your solar panels, plug in the wall and turn the inverter on and you are all set. At this point, I only have a 100 watt solar panel hooked up and using my Kill A Watt monitor, this device is bringing in about 71 watts into my house. That's enough to offset my base load electricity usage (the stuff that is always sucking up a little juice whether they are one or off and a couple lights that are always on).
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.Is it really MPPT?
By Jeff Ferland
I hooked this up to two 100 watt solar panels wired in parallel and I haven't been able to draw more than 155 watts (of the 200 watt rating) measured at the panels when measured with a Watts Up meter. Voltage is draw down to around 14 volts when the optimum range for the panels should be closer to 18 volts, so I'm certain there's a loss factor with this device.Measured draw shows it slowly ramps up wattage over about 30 seconds when first brought online and shuts down properly when grid power is removed. This doesn't appear to have a UL rating, so that can be an issue with your power company / using the device in the US.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.payback for the elec company overcharges(pun intended)
By Jeff
Its very nice when you can use technology to get back at 'the man' in this case-the electric company.anyone notice how their elec bills have gone up dramatically since obama has been president/well.......most power plants here in the u.s. are powered by coal......the same coal that obama said hewould tax them out of business or make it to tax expensive to build(carbon credits) we are being stolenfrom by the unauthenticated carbon tax scam of which people like al gore are making millions off of.well with this little grid-inverter, you can stab back at "the man' by selling you energy back while away fromhome. i have estimated that an average household can sell back about 28kwh of power per month with 2 ofthese hooked up. also it seems as tho people are having spike issues with these, i hooked mine up to my batterybank and it genned away as happy as can be. best thing is to put a 120vac switch on the solar input that way whengrid power goes down it also shuts off the solar input to protect the unit.


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