The simple answer to your question is NO.
I think you had better tell us the make and model of your inverter and why you think it outputs 60Vac.
Please excuse my question if it sounds goofy, I am new to wiring ac inverters into isolated sub-panels but have never seen any real discussion on this subject...
As I understand all 110v inverters swing the AC at the ground point 0v on the inverter making 60v per side equaling 120v. I have verified this with a multi-meter and scope. I guess this is why you never attach the neutral to a point on the breaker box where it bonds with ground. Both sides (black and white) are hot.
I have 2 110 output inverters... a dinosaur Trace Model 810 and a modern Ames 1250. Both swing the output voltage 60v+/- hot/neutral from ground equaling 120v.
If a breaker or fuse was not on the neutral line at the box there would be no protection if the 60v neutral side would short to ground it would energize the chassis. Right? (hopefully the inverter would shut down, but...)
Here's would be a real world example:
If there was an inverter connected to a off-grid sub panel (/w neutral isolated from ground) wired as if we were using standard ac (1 breaker on the black wire), lets say the inverter was not turned off and you just flipped off the hot breaker to do some electrical maintenance, wouldn't you get a 60v AC shock on the neutral?
It's confusing to me and why I asked the original question.
Thanks for the reply!
Bently