Guy answered my wish for a device to attach in the Photovoltaic input line of a solar system to move current into a water heater when the battery was full and there was sufficient energy coming in.
He answered this way and I am trying to work up a circuit.
He's moving atm and won't be contactable for a week.
Don't have a scanner working yet. But I understand how the TL494 pulses the Mosfets but how it all connects up to the capacitor bank is the confusing part for me. I assume its NChannel mosfets . Plus I don't see 4 resistors ,one across each Mosfet =2?
Thanks in advance gents.

He answered this way and I am trying to work up a circuit.
He's moving atm and won't be contactable for a week.
Don't have a scanner working yet. But I understand how the TL494 pulses the Mosfets but how it all connects up to the capacitor bank is the confusing part for me. I assume its NChannel mosfets . Plus I don't see 4 resistors ,one across each Mosfet =2?
Thanks in advance gents.
There is only one method that is efficient for resistive heating. Storing energy in a capacitor, keeping that at a constant voltage and proportionately dumping into the load in pulses. There are many ways to do that, but they all follow that principal. Operating off lead batteries by a voltage switch should be avoided. There are other circuits using cheap China inverter boards on the internet.
A capacitor bank is needed and should be isolated from the charge controller with a diode. That will prevent tracking errors with a MPPT charge controller.
The easy way to do it it with a TL494, these are like 10 for $1. It has all the features you need. Just operates the inverse of what it is usually used for, turning off at a low voltage and on when it gets high. A resistor and capacitor for the oscillator. Voltage divider pot to turn PV voltage to about 5V. 4 resistors to drive the two FET. Two fet as the output switchers. These FET will be in parallel and you use two to get the resistance down so there is no heating. If you buy a 100A FET, don't use it at over 10A. Two get you 20A easily. They are cheap and no reason to use big heat sinks. Litle perf boards are 5 for $1. There are also thru hole TL494 driver boards cheap that a couple of traces could be cut on.Then a resistor and zener are needed to supply 12-15V.

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