My question still remains does anyone know of anybody that has any experience with them??
Myself, I know nothing about the Apollo inverter. I know of nobody that is using one for off-grid power.
The way I look at it, when it comes to off-grid power you got the Big Three - Xantrex, Outback and Magnum Energy. When you get to the point of spending upwards of $2,000 or more on an inverter, it had better come with support, service and parts readily available for it. You're in a different ballgame than a $289 throw-away unit. The Big Three provide all the above. Before I'd buy an Apollo inverter I'd find out where you can get these things for it. If it's one of those deals where when something happens to it you have to box it up and send it away to Tim Buck Too, then wait 2-3 weeks to get a replacement (or repaired unit) back, well, that doesn't work all that well for off-grid power. If there's an Authorized Service Center or dealer within a half day's driving range, and they carry the parts for it and provide service both under warranty, and out, then I'd look at buying one (maybe).
When we put in our upgraded power system this past summer, that was the main criteria and why I chose Xantrex over Outback. I got a Xantrex dealer/Authorized Service Center only 170 miles away and they carry everything on hand, including a complete replacement unit if need be, to have me back up and running same day if one goes belly up. I've had some inverters fail over the years. In the summer it ain't too bad and you can get by. In the winter, if one goes down, we have to have power to run our central forced air wood furnace blower and get water out of our well. Sure, I can start the gen and bypass the whole thing. But how many days in a row can you afford to do that in the dead of winter when it's 20 below zero F? And without that inverter you can't use any of your turbines or solar panels to power your home unless you got stuff wired DC. So all you got is the gen if that inverter quits.
When you got a 120 volt system you can go buy a cheap throwaway backup unit to get by until your main unit gets fixed. When you go with 120/240 split phase that is not an option. All you got is the gen. The unit you got is not a split phase inverter, so that won't work for backup either.
If you're going to spend close to $2 Grand I'd stick with one of the Big Three. The reason they are the Big Three is because they have a proven track record of reliability and uptime. You asked for opinions - that's mine.
--
Chris