If you plan on having an Eco Flow Delta Pro 3 Power station( indoors ) where there are humans - the unit ( In Canada not sure about the US) must have a UL 9540A rating for fire protection during a Battery runaway. I JUST BOUGHT THE Eco Flow Delta Pro 3 Power station AND THE EXTRA SMART Battery 4000 Watts each - total 8000 Watts, and the Electrical Inspector during the install Inspection indoors - at first couldn't find the UL 9540A Certification, so I had to go through some E mails to support, to get the certification documents WHICH I DID GET - or I would have to build a fire safe room for the Batteries as per the NBC Canadian National Building code and Alberta Electrical code 64-1100 for any ESS system Energy Supply System - (Batteries). An outside system obviously doesn't need the certification, but if you are hooking this up inside where people are, better get the certification. Just a heads up.
Ive never heard that before. Ive talked to my local city and they have nothing regulating solar. As far as UL certifications, I have only heard those referenced with grid connection which mine is not. In the brief search i did it seems as if that certification has become standard practice for power stations as well as batteries, but should be verified if local code requires the certification.
Does the furnace work without the bonding plug if Delta 3 Plus is plugged in (charging)? Thanks.
@rontcyip No it doesn't. I checked that first. This only applies to newer furnaces
If you plan on having an Eco Flow Delta Pro 3 Power station( indoors ) where there are humans - the unit ( In Canada not sure about the US) must have a UL 9540A rating for fire protection during a Battery runaway.
I JUST BOUGHT THE Eco Flow Delta Pro 3 Power station AND THE EXTRA SMART Battery 4000 Watts each - total 8000 Watts, and the Electrical Inspector during the install Inspection indoors - at first couldn't find the UL 9540A Certification, so I had to go through some E mails to support, to get the certification documents WHICH I DID GET - or I would have to build a fire safe room for the Batteries as per the NBC Canadian National Building code and Alberta Electrical code 64-1100 for any ESS system Energy Supply System - (Batteries). An outside system obviously doesn't need the certification, but if you are hooking this up inside where people are, better get the certification. Just a heads up.
Ive never heard that before. Ive talked to my local city and they have nothing regulating solar. As far as UL certifications, I have only heard those referenced with grid connection which mine is not. In the brief search i did it seems as if that certification has become standard practice for power stations as well as batteries, but should be verified if local code requires the certification.