Originally posted by mr.clean
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One advantage of this is, using 2 caps in series your running at 1/2 the system voltage through the transformer - discharging one cap at a time.
If you size the caps quite a bit smaller than the storage caps they will fill in short order and not remove a lot of energy from the charged bank of caps. Just for clarification, say your charged bank of caps is 30uf total which at 600 volts would be around 5.4 Joules. Your inverter caps in series could be in the range of 2 uf each ( 1 uf in series to be charged ). These would hold a total of .36 Joules or an energy difference of 15 to 1. (Edit: this would be about 40 watts output at 60hz) There wouldn't be a lot removed from the bank to fill the smaller caps per discharge. Your filling the bank at a higher frequency so you have time between discharges to replace what was used. Charging at 50khz and discharging at 60hz or 833:1.
You can really get the energy difference between the bank and output caps up there when you alter the output voltage. Using the 600 volt output of the bank and reducing it to say 150 volts on the output caps. Which would be an energy difference of 240:1 . The higher the ratio the less work you need to do on the input side but you also reduce the output so it depends on the loads your trying to run.
Your basically playing a time game between the 2 systems....
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