Banco de carga de prueba del inversor

Banco de carga del inversor GROADA-AC400V-30KW-RCD

★★★★★
Productos principales:
  • Banco de carga de CA: R / RL / RLC / RCD
  • Banco de carga de corriente continua: DC5V - 2000V, 0A - 5000A


modeloAC220V-5KW-RCDAC220V-10KW-RCDAC220V-15KW-RCDAC220V-20KW-RCDAC380V -30KW-RCDAC380V -50KW-RCDAC380V -60KW-RCDAC380V -100KW-RCDAC380V -200KW-RCD
Potencia nominalR = 5KWR = 10KWR = 15KWR = 20KWR = 30KWR = 50KWR = 60KWR = 100KWR = 200KW
RCD = 5KVARCD = 10KVARCD = 15KVARCD = 20KVARCD = 30KVARCD = 50KVARCD = 60KVARCD = 100KVARCD = 200KVA
Corriente de entrada0-22A0-45A0-45A0-90A0-45A0-300A0-450A0-600A0-750A
Tamaño (ancho * profundidad * altura mm)500*600*800500*600*1000500*600*1100500*750*1100600*850*1400600*850*1600600*850*1850700*1000*18001100*1400*1800
Peso50 kg80 kg100 kg130 kg200 kg300 kg350kg450 kg550kg
Voltaje de entradaAC220 / 230VAC380 / 400V
Otro voltaje de entrada se puede personalizar según los requisitos
Carga mínima100W100W100W100W100W1 KW1 KW1 KW1 KW
Otra potencia mínima de carga se puede personalizar según los requisitos
Precisión general3% (otros requisitos de precisión se pueden personalizar según los requisitos)
factor de potenciaPF = 0,6 ~ 1,0
coeficiente de pico2 a 3
Modo de controlManual local / ordenador anfitrión remoto (modo de control manual local: interruptor / botón / pantalla táctil de tres vías opcional, otros métodos se pueden personalizar según se requiera)
Interfaz remotaRS232/RS485/USB/RJ45/CAN/GPIB (otros modos de interfaz se pueden personalizar según los requisitos)
Función de protecciónProtección contra paradas de emergencia, protección contra sobretemperaturas, protección contra bloqueo de carga del ventilador, protección contra puesta a tierra (seleccione protección contra sobrevoltaje, protección contra sobrecorriente, protección contra cortocircuitos, sobrecarga del ventilador, volumen de aire insuficiente)
Fuente de alimentación de trabajoAC220VAC220V / AC380V
Precisión de la pantallaNivel 0,5 (otra precisión explícita se puede personalizar según los requisitos)
Parámetros de visualizaciónVoltaje, corriente, potencia, frecuencia, factor de potencia, etc. (otros métodos explícitos se pueden personalizar según los requisitos)
De manera segura fríaEntrada de aire lateral y salida de aire superior (otros métodos de salida de aire se pueden personalizar según los requisitos)
Nivel de protecciónIP20 (otro nivel de protección se puede personalizar según los requisitos)
Color de aparienciaRAL7035 (otros colores se pueden personalizar según los requisitos)
Temperatura de trabajo-10 ℃ ~ 55 ℃
Humedad relativa ≤95% RH
Altitud ≤ 2500 m



Banco de carga del inversor RCD AC 400 V / 30 kW – Descripción técnica & Guía de Aplicación

1. Introducción

En la electrónica de potencia y los sistemas de energía renovable, la verificación precisa del rendimiento del inversor es indispensable. ElBanco de carga del inversor RCD AC 400 V / 30 kWestá diseñado para proporcionar cargas de prueba fiables y controlables para la validación, diagnóstico y calibración del inversor. Este producto está diseñado para uso en R & amp; D, control de calidad, fabricación y entornos de servicio de campo.

Esta página explica los principios técnicos, los casos de uso de prueba, las especificaciones de rendimiento y las mejores prácticas de la industria, con el fin de ayudar a los ingenieros, los líderes de proyectos y los tomadores de decisiones a tomar decisiones informadas.


2. ¿Por qué usar un banco de carga del inversor?

2.1 Propósito y Función

A load bank simulates electrical loads by drawing controlled current from the inverter under test, converting the drawn power into heat (or other forms) while allowing measurement of voltage, current, power, efficiency, and dynamic behavior. In short: it acts as a controlled “dummy load” to stress the inverter and reveal performance characteristics.
This is analogous to standard load banks used for generators or UPS systems. 

In inverter testing (especially for photovoltaic (PV) systems, motor drives, or hybrid systems), a load bank helps confirm that the inverter can:

  • Sustain rated output under full load

  • Handle transient load changes

  • Maintain waveform quality, voltage & frequency stability

  • Trigger protective functions (overload, overvoltage, overtemperature)

  • Operate reliably over extended duration or under climatic stress

Accurate load testing is a key step before deploying inverters to the field — for safety, reliability, and warranty assurance.

2.2 Types of Load Simulation

There are broadly two categories of load simulation used in inverter testing:

  1. Passive / Resistive Loads — simple resistive loads (pure resistance) are straightforward, stable, and cost-effective. They are good for baseline performance tests.

  2. Active / Reactive / Programmable Loads — more advanced loads that can emulate inductance, capacitance, motor-like behavior, varying power factor, transient behaviors, and bi-directional current flow. These are essential when testing inverters under realistic conditions (e.g. with motors, grid interactions). 

For example, a programmable AC load (active AC load) can vary its impedance dynamically, enabling tests across different load scenarios (resistive, inductive, mixed). 

The choice of load type depends on the target application (solar, electric vehicle, motor drive) and required test coverage.


3. Key Technical Specifications & Design Features

Below is a suggested structure of specification and feature content you can adapt or extend for your product page.

ParámetroTypical Value / RangeImportance / Notes
Nominal output voltage380–480 V AC (or adjustable around 400 V)Must match inverter output voltage to avoid mismatch
Potencia nominal30 kWAllows testing inverters up to this power class
Load control modeConstant power / constant current / constant impedanceVersatility in various load profiles
Power factor range0.8 lag to 0.8 lead (or full range)To emulate inductive or capacitive loads
Cooling methodForced air / water-cooledFor thermal management under high load
Accuracy / measurement precisione.g. ±0.5 % for current/voltageEnsures accurate performance evaluation
Response time / dynamic bandwidthe.g. <1 ms, or specified slew rateImportant for transient load changes
Protection & safetyOverload, overtemperature, overvoltage, short-circuitSafeguards both load unit and inverter
Communication & control interfacesRS-485, CAN, Ethernet, Modbus, SCPIFor remote control, automation, integration
Cooling / ambient supportOperation range (e.g. –20 °C to +60 °C)Ensures performance under field-like conditions
Mechanical designCompact modular racks, ease of integrationFacilitates adoption in test benches

In your page, you can present these specifications clearly, with callouts (e.g. “Why this matters”), diagrams, and even downloadable PDF spec sheets.

You should also highlight unique selling points (USPs) such as:

  • Modular expansion (e.g. stacking load modules)

  • Fast dynamic response

  • High-precision measurement

  • Long-term durability (e.g. continuous full-load operation)

  • Safety certifications (CE, UL, etc.)

  • Ease of calibration and maintenance

These USPs help users compare your product against alternatives.


4. Application Scenarios & Use Cases

To strengthen E-E-A-T (especially Experience and Expertise), you should incorporate real-world use cases, test methodologies, and examples from industry. Below are four suggested scenarios:

4.1 PV / Solar Inverter Testing

In solar inverter R&D or production, load banks help validate output under varying irradiance, grid fluctuations, and load transients. You verify Maximum Power Point Tracking (MPPT) behavior, interaction with the grid (voltage/frequency synchronization). 

You may simulate grid disturbances or ramp up/down loads to confirm inverter stability.

4.2 Motor Drive / EV Inverter Validation

In electric vehicle or industrial motor drives, the inverter outputs to a motor. A load bank that can emulate motor behavior (inductive or dynamic load) is crucial, especially to test regenerative braking, transient response, or torque control. Active loads offer bi-directional current capability, enabling more realistic emulation. 

You might also simulate load steps (rapid jerk in torque) and confirm that the inverter’s control loops recover properly.

4.3 Endurance & Environmental Stress Testing

To assess long-term reliability, the load bank is used to run continuous full-load or partial-load tests under temperature, humidity, vibration stress. Manufacturers like ATESTEO use climatic chambers to simulate environments from –60 °C to +160 °C during inverter testing. 

Such tests help detect hidden defects (thermal drift, material fatigue, insulation issues) before field deployment.

4.4 Quality Control & Batch Testing

In a production line environment, you may use the load bank to spot-check inverters, validate batch consistency, certify output under worst-case scenarios, or re-test returned units. The fast control interface allows automation and integration into manufacturing test benches.

Describing these concrete applications (with maybe anonymized client stories or case studies) strengthens credibility and usefulness of your page content.


5. Test Methodology & Best Practices

To show experience and guide users, include a detailed “how-to” or best-practice section. This helps users trust your content as authoritative and actionable.

5.1 Step-by-Step Load Test Procedure

  1. Preparation & Safety Checks

    • Confirm inverter is disengaged (no output)

    • Verify all safety interlocks

    • Check load bank calibration, cooling, cabling

  2. Light Load / No-Load Baseline Test

    • Apply minimal resistive load (e.g. 5–10 % rating)

    • Check baseline behavior, waveform purity via oscilloscope

    • Verify no abnormal noise, heating, oscillation

  3. Gradual Load Ramp-Up

    • Increase load in steps (e.g. 20 %, 50 %, 80 %, 100 %)

    • At each step, record voltage, current, real power, power factor, harmonic distortion

    • Monitor temperature, fan activity, internal protection thresholds

  4. Full-Load Continuous Operation

    • Run for a designed dwell time (e.g. 1h, 4h, 8h)

    • Log any drift, dropouts, thermal stability

    • Confirm output remains within spec

  5. Transient / Step-Change Tests

    • Suddenly change load (increase or decrease 20–50 %)

    • Observe response time, overshoot, oscillation

    • Verify inverter control stability

  6. Overload & Fault Simulation (Optional)

    • Slightly exceed rated load to test protection

    • Induce fault (short) in controlled setup (if safety permits)

    • Confirm shutdown, alarm mechanisms

  7. Cooling & Thermal Recovery Observation

    • After tests, allow cooldown

    • Monitor any residual heating or slow recovery

  8. Data Analysis & Reporting

    • Compile results into charts (efficiency vs load, THD vs load, thermal profile)

    • Compare against design expectations, standards

You may reference general inverter testing guides (e.g. for pure sine wave inverters) as background. 

5.2 Design & Deployment Tips

  • Always derate load bank if ambient temperature is high

  • Ensure cable sizing to avoid voltage drop or overheating

  • Synchronize measurement devices (use proper instrumentation)

  • Periodically calibrate load modules to maintain accuracy

  • Use modular load bank design to scale capacity

  • Incorporate safety interlocks, ground references, emergency shutdown

Offering this detailed, stepwise methodology shows your team knows the domain—not just marketing fluff.


6. Market Trends & Industry Context

To add authority and context, you should reference broader market trends, statistics, or industry challenges. Below are suggestions you can expand:

  • The global inverter market (especially for solar, EV, and industrial drives) continues to grow at a robust CAGR, driving demand for reliable testing equipment (source: industry reports)

  • As inverters become more complex (multi-level topology, high switching frequency, integrated power electronics + control), the need for high-fidelity load banks (fast dynamic response, reactive load emulation) increases

  • In EV manufacturing, stringent qualification tests (e.g. ISO, automotive OEM standards) often mandate extended load testing under environmental stress

  • Renewable grid-interactive inverters must satisfy grid codes (anti-islanding, voltage/frequency ride-through), which means test systems must be able to emulate grid disturbances and loads

  • In many regions, warranty claims or field failures due to thermal stress or component drift can be mitigated by good pre-shipment load testing

You may want to cite recent market reports in your vertical to support such statements (e.g. “Solar inverter market size 2025–2030 forecasts” etc.).


7. Why Choose Our Load Bank / What Sets Us Apart

Here you should deliver a persuasive, credibility-backed pitch, referencing your technical strengths and real-world validation:

  • Proven Reliability: Designed for continuous duty, with industrial-grade components, redundant cooling, and thermal protection.

  • High Precision & Diagnostics: Accurate metering, fine control steps, high-speed response for dynamic loads.

  • Modular & Scalable: Expandable modules allow you to satisfy 30 kW today, and scale to higher power in the future.

  • Integration & Automation: Full communication interfaces (Modbus, CAN, Ethernet) for linking to test benches, SCADA systems, or automated test sequences.

  • Safety & Compliance: Built according to major safety and quality standards; includes interlocks, alarms, protective features.

  • Support & Service: Backed by expert technical support, calibration services, and documentation.

You can further bolster this with customer testimonials, whitepapers, certification records, or case studies.

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