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As you know, excessive heat cooks batteries and good thing you caught that now ~ (in fact it's amazing that batteries don't cook inside engine compartments)!
I suspect your Inverter may be out of warranty and if it is, will you consider a external solar panel regulator? This should limit the charge to your batteries and your Inverter... it's what I would do.
The voltage should be the same for both. Maybe one or the other isn't calibrated correctly. Have a friend with another multimeter check the output, and then take the voltage that is the same from his and yours.
You have to do is: Check the battery if it is leak.Use a voltmeter to test the output voltage of the battery.If your battery had a low supply voltage even you charge it for 3 hours and above.Replace the battery immediately.
If this is a 12 volt battery situation, 24.6 volts is not doing good things for your batteries--it will buckle the inner plates causing immediate battery failure. Were the fuses themselves blown or just the fuse mounts which may have been underrated. You definitely need a schematic for this system--try googling 'microtek 810'. Good luck!
Sounds like an inverter problem. If the power supply is internal replace the capacitors coming out of the voltage regulators. These are usually 1000mf and/or 470mf. If that doesn't do the trick look up the numbers on the 8-pin chips that drive the secondary transformers on the inverter to see if they are getting the right voltages. Good Luck!
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