I have a Morningstar SunSaver controller between the battery and the rest of the DC system. When I called All Terrain, I was told to hook the inverter up to the battery directly, not to the controller.
Did I misunderstand them? Is it true that I may not hook the inverter up to the SunSaver? There is a place to connect the SunSaver up to "Load". Would that solve the problem?
If I can't hook the inverter up to the SunSaver, do I need a second controller (or something else) to protect the battery from the inverter?
They are correct in telling you that unless you want to buy another controller.
Although you are correct in concept that the sunsaver does low voltage disconnect for the battery, the problem is your 1200W inverter FAR EXCEEDS the 15amp rating for the load terminals on that controller. (1200W @ 12V = 100amps, @ 14V = 86amps). Here is the manual to that controller by the way:
http://www.morningstarcorp.com/en/support/library/SSMPPT.IOM.EN.02.pdf
I'm sure there might be some product out there for you but to handle the amp ratings that inverter could pull they might be costly. Most likely some sort of relay would be needed but I'm not versed enough to detail out exactly all that would be needed.
Is this inverter for occasional use items like a microwave or something?(whatever it is if you plan to pull high wattage out of it you're not going to be running it a long time unattended) You'll probably just need to keep an eye on the battery voltage with a voltmeter after each time you use it.