A 2000watt solar generator will be enough watts to run the camper's AC system. That part will work well. The question, is the one that Dustin is pointing out, is whether the battery is big enough to be useful. One thing I have noted with the 2000watt SoGens are they have bigger batteries and have the potential to be enough to be useful. This will greatly depend on your expectations. If planning on running the AC all night for a week no way would it work. But, if planning to run it sparingly for 2 or 3 nights it should work. You also have the ability with most of these 2000watt units to expand with a separate battery pack. That is an expensive but effective solution. Thankfully these SoGens have come down greatly in price the last two years.
To use a SoGen to run the AC system simply plug the camper's shore power into the SoGen.
Still, hard to beat a Honda 2200 gas generator like Dustin said.
Cary
Great summary. Ty.
These sogens have gotten so capable and prices come down its really amazing.
I use AC sparingly, but nice to be able to boondock and have it in a pinch with power to run it, separate from the CampInn house battery.
Carrying a little gas genny is a great backup for longer trips, where you run out of sun or the tow vehicle engine is not the best way to recharge a big sogen.
See one of Cosmo's old youtubes (god rest his soul what a nice man still miss him)
About trying to keep his bat-tree charged in a snowstorm in the Maine woods, by sweeping snow off scattered solar panels...
No disrespect but thats me, like Mickey in the Sorcerers Apprentice..,
One small thing to check on sogens, per
@dustinp tip
"Can the sogen put out power at the same time as being charged?" Some can some cant, or you may have to go thru the dc side which may NOT be regulated in the sogens battery control charging software. So thats something to check on specs for flexibility, and on gas genny output options.
Its kinda inefficient to invert DC to AC and then convert it back to DC charge a bat-tree...