I tend to dislike appliances which combine more than one task into one piece.
Preach, brother!
For Life PO4 batteries I've heard that the optimum charge rate is about 30-40%.....in Amps......of the total Amp/hr of the battery. So one would want a 30 Amp charger for a 100 A/H battery.
If we are connected to shore power we can assume being in place for at least a few hours If so, even lower charging rates are possible and likely helpful. More thoughts on this below.
If I were to go with a stand alone inverter, What functional considerations should I be aware of and any recommended brands
Unless you are running purely resistive loads (hot plates, whatever) I'd look for:
If the inverter is to be left on 24/7 then low parasitic draw and/or the presence of an energy-saving mode are more important. If turned off when not in use then no biggie.
or models of stand alone AC chargers?
For shore power charging LFP (
maintaining, really) I'd pick out a dumb
converter (or 12v power supply) that puts out ~13.2v (13.0-13.4v) For weeks/months on end I'd lean toward the lower end. IMO C/5 current (20Ah for 100Ah of LFP)
would be optimal assuming it can keep up with loads.
These voltages may seem low* but the bank does not need to be (and does not
like to be) fully charged while on shore power. Normal forms of charging (solar, DC-DC, whatever) can fully charge when that's needed.
* because the standard charging recommended charging voltages are, IMO, counterproductively high.