I'm not asking anyone to justify anything. In less than four months this 'paper' system I am barely even beginning to outline will be installed and working whatever it turns out to be. Unless of course the price is too high and then nothing gets installed and we don't use the place and keep using our rentals in town which would suck.
I don't care how much better anything is if its unaffordable at this time we either have to wait or simply do without. And two thousand dollars for (1) component of many is expensive in my world. So price is a HUGE disadvantage of pure-sine. Big enough that I'm raising the question and getting surprising responses as if cost is the least important factor. Our budget will never be big enough and because of that something will suffer. Judging by the few responses I have so far if I posted a similar thread in the vein of cheaper/fewer batteries vs cost and performance I'd get chewed out for not planning on putting in a 40kwh bank. There's gotta be a balance somewhere. I thought this was 'otherpower' we build windmills from car parts and turbines from cage fans. Do we just throw money at it now?
A major motivation for building this homestead is to prove you can do an awful lot of stuff without a lot of money if you just think about what your doing and use a little elbow grease. I get sick of all this it only costs $70,000 to go 'green' crap. I drive a car thats 30 years old, cost me a thousand dollars, another thousand dollars of thoughtful modifications and its given me 50,000 miles of almost 'free' drive on waste oil. Thats what two grand means to me, A car that goes anywhere roads exist for a little time, rubber and brake pads.
If you read my original post again and preferably my other post about AC vs DC, you'll see a lot of information about my project and also evolution in my thoughts. I really enjoy challenging what 'feels' right and I was almost dead-set on running a largely DC house/homestead. Instead after 35 posts I've almost completely changed my mind. I still think pure DC systems are wonderful, but maybe for my own 'personal' cabin, not so much the common space anymore.
Also, the manufacturer of the induction cooktops we are going to go with says they will work fine and still be warrantied under MOD sine. The cooktops are going to be the single biggest draws. So why not really consider mod-sine? If it turned out it was 'good' enough for us, we could 'cheep' out and put $1500 more into batteries.
Don't get me wrong, I want it all. Huge batteries, unlimited pure sine passively cooled, hell I want a push-button generator start inside the kitchen. But what I get is a different story which is why its so good to post here and get as much input as I can. I did feel like your post was negative but I appreciate it just the same.
I think we need at LEAST 250Ah @48 worth of storage, We will be keeping weird hours forever so there is no sweet spot of use/charging for us. Heavy draws like dishwashing/clothes washing will of course planned but generally speaking computers/lights/cooking could happen at anytime.
Our primary source of power generation is a bio-fuel generator for now. Until we can save up for RE. The inverter question is raised here because I am working on envisioning the backbone of our whole RE system sans pv or wind.
I have my heart set on a outback FX80 charge controller, I think its big enough to handle our inputs for as far as I can see, and is very evening matched in AC input power as our generators output (about 3.0kwh) and will be a great platform for a 48v pv array.
I'd type more but its getting to late!