sorry to dig up an old thread but i just wanted to know if anyone can give me a heads up of the differences between a normal inverter and a pure sine wave inverter and what type of appliances as an example that wont work on a normal inverter.
No problems.
AFAIK, square wave inverters are the dinosaur version.
Most inverters are modified sine wave inverters, i.e. the sin wave is approximated by a series of steps, the more the better.
Also, a lot of stuff uses inverter PS these days, even some little plug-packs. are not as fussy.
The devil is in the detail, so better guidance on exactly what you are trying to run would give better info, e.g. air-con or heavy motor, then get a generator.
Otherwise, a good brand of MSW inverter will run most stuff.
Lap tops with external PS are usually fine, but run hotter. Worst case is you buy a new cheap external PS(would perform better anyway). I have actually smoked a 60watt inverter running a laptop that said 60w max. No problems with ancient toshiba laptop.
What you most definitely can not run safely is equipment with power switching that relies on the Zero crossing in the sin wave. MosFet(?) circuitry. These things are not designed to switch large currents, but to switch the instant the voltage changes polarity in the AC. They tend to fail if asked to switch large currents.
The only common example I know is CPAP machines. Most can run fine on MSW inverters, provided they do not have the heated humidifer attached. It is the switching circuitry in the humidifers that is the dangerous bit.
Unfortunately, if equipment manufacturers can see an opportunity to sell you more gear they do not provide information on use with an inverter. Also, some love pointing to an inverter to avoid a warranty.
You are best to state what gear you are looking at running on it and see if someone has experience.
FWIW, I've run stuff on a Jaycar 300w for over a 15 years and apart from a broken 240V socket, it has been fine.