Posting here on the offchance that someone might know what's going on.
I have a number of devices in my house powered directly off my 48VDC battery bank solar system, via converters. This is a good setup because I only have a 2000w inverter currently for those devices that can only be powered off 120v AC, and I don't want to overload it. The more devices that the inverter doesn't need to power, the less it will trip.
My modem and router are powered via a 48v to 12v buck converter. Two years ago when I was setting up my system I realized that my home's coaxial cable was grounded, as it should be. I realized it when I was working on the 48v positive bus outside, in bare feet, and got a small jolt. I traced it to the modem: since the coaxial cable is grounded, and the buck converters are non-isolated, there must be a shared ground in the modem's wiring that's creating a path for the negative DC current back through the modem, and through the grounding wire. Interesting, but ultimately I didn't do anything to change that. I was more careful when working on the bus bars, and I didn't have any other issues.
More recently, the past few months, I've been using various small PCs in homelabbing for fun and learning. Because I want to put anything on the battery that I am able, I've been trying to power them directly off my battery/solar, since they're on 24/7 and I want to reduce power. And I keep running into an issue that I don't understand enough to troubleshoot, that I wanted to post about on the offchance that the knowledgeable people on the forum here might know how to fix it. When powering my server off my battery, and plugging in the ethernet cable, I get little or no connectivity. Consistently. I've tried a number of combinations. If the device is being powered by my battery, and using a wired connection, I get no internet. If I power it with mains AC via a standard power brick or PSU, it connects fine. If I power the device off my home battery, but use WIFI to connect, also no issue. Even if I'm using a 48vdc-to-120vac inverter, I still have issues. I've used multiple different kinds of PCs to test this theory: my first server was an old tower-style PC, I've used some reporpused thin clients, and my newest media server build is a 1L Thinkcenter with external drives. All of them are having the same issue of no connectivity when trying to power them off the battery. And lately, with this newest build, it's even causing my modem to crash and have to be restarted every few hours.
So, does anybody have any ideas how to fix this? The past couple of days I've managed to get my latest build to be DC-powered, by simply plugging my modem back into the wall, but it's still having connectivity issues every couple hours that are instantly solved by unplugging/plugging the modem. I thought about disconnecting the grounding wire from the coaxial cable coming into the house, but I'm pretty sure that could lead to an issue if we get a bad lightning storm (though I may do it anyway, temporarily, just to further confirm that this is the source of the issue). I thought about finding a proper isolated DC-DC converter just for the modem, but even 2A rated devices are $60-100. Next I'm going to try to power this latest sever from a standalone inverter, but I purpose-built it to run directly off DC, so that feels like a bit of a letdown.
Any other suggestion? I don't know enough about electrical engineering to know what's the best path here. Thanks!
I have a number of devices in my house powered directly off my 48VDC battery bank solar system, via converters. This is a good setup because I only have a 2000w inverter currently for those devices that can only be powered off 120v AC, and I don't want to overload it. The more devices that the inverter doesn't need to power, the less it will trip.
My modem and router are powered via a 48v to 12v buck converter. Two years ago when I was setting up my system I realized that my home's coaxial cable was grounded, as it should be. I realized it when I was working on the 48v positive bus outside, in bare feet, and got a small jolt. I traced it to the modem: since the coaxial cable is grounded, and the buck converters are non-isolated, there must be a shared ground in the modem's wiring that's creating a path for the negative DC current back through the modem, and through the grounding wire. Interesting, but ultimately I didn't do anything to change that. I was more careful when working on the bus bars, and I didn't have any other issues.
More recently, the past few months, I've been using various small PCs in homelabbing for fun and learning. Because I want to put anything on the battery that I am able, I've been trying to power them directly off my battery/solar, since they're on 24/7 and I want to reduce power. And I keep running into an issue that I don't understand enough to troubleshoot, that I wanted to post about on the offchance that the knowledgeable people on the forum here might know how to fix it. When powering my server off my battery, and plugging in the ethernet cable, I get little or no connectivity. Consistently. I've tried a number of combinations. If the device is being powered by my battery, and using a wired connection, I get no internet. If I power it with mains AC via a standard power brick or PSU, it connects fine. If I power the device off my home battery, but use WIFI to connect, also no issue. Even if I'm using a 48vdc-to-120vac inverter, I still have issues. I've used multiple different kinds of PCs to test this theory: my first server was an old tower-style PC, I've used some reporpused thin clients, and my newest media server build is a 1L Thinkcenter with external drives. All of them are having the same issue of no connectivity when trying to power them off the battery. And lately, with this newest build, it's even causing my modem to crash and have to be restarted every few hours.
So, does anybody have any ideas how to fix this? The past couple of days I've managed to get my latest build to be DC-powered, by simply plugging my modem back into the wall, but it's still having connectivity issues every couple hours that are instantly solved by unplugging/plugging the modem. I thought about disconnecting the grounding wire from the coaxial cable coming into the house, but I'm pretty sure that could lead to an issue if we get a bad lightning storm (though I may do it anyway, temporarily, just to further confirm that this is the source of the issue). I thought about finding a proper isolated DC-DC converter just for the modem, but even 2A rated devices are $60-100. Next I'm going to try to power this latest sever from a standalone inverter, but I purpose-built it to run directly off DC, so that feels like a bit of a letdown.
Any other suggestion? I don't know enough about electrical engineering to know what's the best path here. Thanks!