If you all want, I will help along on a generic DIY inverter design, but this should have a lot of "internal" safety reviews between us so that anyone following along on the path does not get hurt or harm others.
The safety features I'm looking for are "no more than mains voltages" and "all voltages go away when you turn it off". My objection to DC is that it doesn't go away when you turn it off.
If the constructor can't deal with mains voltages, they shouldn't be fooling with mains wiring - and the wiring that comes out of an invertor is mains!
I suppose a good start would be a set of generic "first draft"
specifications?
While we're dreaming, mine are:-
- sinewave <6% distorted, maximum output of at least 240v/125A, 3-phase
- modular design to make it efficient, with more modules connected as load increases, and the supply cut off if the load is too high for the number of modules.
- AC rather than DC loading
- less than ten watts in standby - with load detection using mains-voltage sinewave AC
- 5ppm frequency accuracy measured over the year (less than five minutes)
- as many junk/recycled components as possible, and cheap, readily available components for the rest
- adjustable cutoff voltage so I can use NiFe batteries.
The ones of your list that I'd question are:-
e.g. Be grid feedback compatiable.
There is no way a homebrew generator circuit will be grid feedback compatible. It won't be allowed to be, since it will not be able to be tested. Or rather, each one will have to be sent to the test house individually, which will be prohibitively expensive.
Besides, I'm starting to worry about grid-tie. I think that, if there is too much grid-tie in your neighbourhood, the impedance effects might actually cause blackouts when faced with complex loads.
e.g. Ground Fault protected.
No. This is not something that belongs on an invertor - it belongs on the distribution board. Putting the ground-fault circuitry in the wrong place can actually make things less safe. The invertor should have the case tied to earth, and one side of the output (or the centre of the three-phase) should also be tied to earth. Neutral only appears the other side of the RCB on the distribution board, after the "protective earth" pole that is buried in the ground.
In short, a good invertor can be thought of as an electronic generator - and should be wired as such.