Quote:
Originally Posted by wincrasher
The electronics are DOD grade.
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I assume that DOD is the specification equivalent of Milspec. If so, it's more significant that one might think. A few years ago, I had a Xantrex Prosine 2.0 charger/inverter that not start up when when the unit temperature dropped well below freezing. If the ambient temperature increased, the unit would come alive. If the unit was up and running it was indifferent to ambient temperature, probably because of internal heat generated during operation.
My initial thought was that it was some component lead or solder joint contracting causing some open circuit rather than an out of range component value. But when I queried a senior engineer at Xantrex, he acknowledged this condition was indeed temperature related since the chips and devices used on the circuit boards for the unit were not Milspec rated (which he indicated would continue to operate at wider temperature extremes). Engineering called for Milspec but the marketing pencil pushers said nyet because of the increase in production cost.