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Powerhunt wavebox
Powerhunt wavebox







powerhunt wavebox

Power Hunt 12 Volt Portable Dual Powered 660 Watt Microwave Oven Kit Wavebox Microwave Oven - Dual Power - 12 Volt Travel Appliances by. Power Hunt 12 Volt Portable Dual Powered 660 Watt Microwave Oven Kit Power Hunt 12 Volt Portable Dual Powered 660 Watt Microwave Oven Kit in eBay Motors, Parts & Accessories, Services & Installation eBay : 12 volt microwave Power Hunt Portable 12 Volt Dual Powered 660 Watt Microwave Oven Kit 12 Volt Microwaves - 12 Volt Microwaves Ovens - Power Hunt. Whether you are on the road, the water, in the office or at a hotel (Dual Power Microwave Oven), the WaveBox helps bring the comforts of home wherever you go. With it's easy-grip handle and a compact sleek design, the WaveBoxR portable microwave is as easy to tote as a small picnic cooler. Simply plug the WaveBox into one of three available 12 volt power options and you will be cooking or reheating your favorite foods and beverages in seconds.

powerhunt wavebox

The WaveBox redefines the whole idea of mobile cooking and now with Power Hunt 12 volt system integration you get unsurpassed power and plug and play convenience. The World's first portable microwave oven, The WaveBoxR by Power HuntR puts the power of your kitchen where ever you go. The reinforced ABS casing, heavy-duty luggage handle, no-slip rubberized legs and quality components enable the WaveBox to withstand the rigors of travel, the outdoors and disaster situations.Three preset cook time buttons provide one-touch convenience, add-a-minute control adds time in one-minute increments up to 20 minutes.Included 120V ( or 240V) AC power cord enables operation through any standard household power outlet.

powerhunt wavebox

Dual power AC/DC circuitry allows you to cook or reheat your favorite foods and beverages just about anywhere.To do that, if you want to be a purist, you would capture the inverter no load, and loaded wave-forms, run FFT transform for frequency content, then do calculations of low pass filter networks to arrive at suitable components to clean up the output (at a lower power than what the inverter puts out, obviously), then run your microwave oven off the output from the filter. Yes, it might be far cheaper to take the inverter wave-form and "tweak" it back to nearer a single 60 Hz or 50 Hz frequency using an oscillator circuit that is resonant at line frequency with a "reasonable" Q value. For reduction of irritant noise level, use the inverter with output conditioning. It also does not take into account the high level of introduced acoustic noise from the operation of said equipment. This does not include any consideration of cost of the alternator you attach to the motor.

powerhunt wavebox

There are some higher voltage DC motors out there that might be less expensive. What I found on quick search for 4 HP DC motors, is that getting a good one under $1000 USD will be a real challenge, especially in the 12 VDC voltage. Rather than use this inverter (which OP will use because of cost), why not take DC power to run a DC motor-alternator (with 220 VAC output suitable for all AC power on board. I left the shop saying I would give it a try again, he smiled and said: remember next Monday is a holiday and my shop will be closed. In his opinion nothing should happen to the microwave as all the electronic components run on 5V DC and the magnetron on 220V (the type of wave did not matter). On the other hand he said it was the first time someone told him about an oven used on a inverter. He saw no relationship between the broken fan and the "square wave". After replacing the fan it was in working order again. A safety switch prevented further damage. The repair shop guy said hat the oven worked this way because it was overheating due to a broken cooling fan. I tried to make it run one more time and the same happened again. After a while it showed again a normal (lit) display. Last Sunday I programmed it to run 30 sec´s, it started ok, to completely die a few secs later. In my case, due to the hurry in which I wrote the post this afternoon, I did not tell that I actually had used the microwave oven on the inverter a few times during the last months (only 30 sec´s or so to heat up a cup of coffee), besides being noisier than expected for a new appliance it seemed to work ok.









Powerhunt wavebox