Solar Guppy,
I am a little surprised at your suggestion regarding using a timer to activate a fan to cool the heat sinks on the inverters. I thought that you liked to conserve power as much as possible. How about cloudy days when the inverters do not get up to higher temperatures that need cooling?? I have not actually looked at inverter temperatures on cloudy days, so it may be moot point. I would think that running a fan on a timer would be wasting power if it was a cloudy or really hazy day. How about using a thermal switch? I have some thermal switches already and would not have to go out and buy one. Again, I am a newbie when it comes to this solar stuff, that's why I am asking all the questions.
Note: I did turn on a fan around mid day to see what it would do to the heat sink temperatures on the GT 3.3's. Before I turned the fan on, inverter #1 heat sink was runnung at 136 degrees, inverter #2 heat sink was running at 132 degrees.
With the fan on, inverter #1 heat sink is running now at 106 degrees, and inverter #2 heat sink is running at 99 degrees.
WOW!!!!!! Major differnce!
My next decision will be how to implement activation of the cooling fans.
I am leaning towards a thermal switch to conserve power rather than a timer. What do you think?