Original Post
Written by
Edited June 27, 2022
at 05:59 PM
by
Previous deal posted is marked as "Expired", but its LIVE again:
Great deal IF you are already invested in the 40v ecosystem, and have a bunch of 40v batteries.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/RYOBI...314809255?
I now have 6 40V batteries, so it was a no-brainer for me.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/RYOBI...E0#overlay
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That 114 w/h figure is incorrect. The 40v 4ah batteries are 144w/h, so 576Wh total.
The other 40v variants:
5Ah - 180Wh / 720Wh
6Ah - 216Wh / 864Wh
7.5Ah - 270Wh / 1080Wh
8Ah - 280Wh / 1120Wh
9Ah - 324Wh / 1296Wh
12Ah - 432Wh / 1728Wh
I don't have one of these, but there's a testing video on YouTube that calculated an efficiency rate of 73% - which is about on par with the larger capacity battery power stations on the market I've seen.
FWIW, the best deal on a solar capable and 2000+Wh battery generator with solar input I've seen in the last few months is the Leoch 2000Wh (it's actually underrated and is 2200Wh) on Amazon for $924 (Clip coupon, then Google for the current additional discount code). It has its pros and cons, but a very good deal, LiFePo4, has solar input, has automatic switching for UPS functionality, and it runs at 84% efficiency. Hobotech on YouTube has two review videos that really go in depth on testing and features.
This is a good inverter and it can power a microwave but aren't you better off just getting one of those dedicated Anker, Jackery or Bluetti type battery station that are already solar panel compatible?
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This is a good inverter and it can power a microwave but aren't you better off just getting one of those dedicated Anker, Jackery or Bluetti type battery station that are already solar panel compatible?
This is a good inverter and it can power a microwave but aren't you better off just getting one of those dedicated Anker, Jackery or Bluetti type battery station that are already solar panel compatible?
IF you already have Ryobi 40v batteries, you are better off getting this than a Anker/Jackery etc.
But the runtime will be nowhere near that of an Anker/Jacker/Ecoflow/Bluetti. For roughly $500-600 they will give you about 500 w/h but only 600~1200 watts output.
The stand alone units will charge much faster than the Ryobi on it's own but if you have the ryobi ecosystem you could be swapping out batteries and charging off grid with the 1 hour charger.
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But the runtime will be nowhere near that of an Anker/Jacker/Ecoflow/Bluetti. For roughly $500-600 they will give you about 500 w/h but only 600~1200 watts output.
The stand alone units will charge much faster than the Ryobi on it's own but if you have the ryobi ecosystem you could be swapping out batteries and charging off grid with the 1 hour charger.
The other 40v variants:
5Ah - 180Wh / 720Wh
6Ah - 216Wh / 864Wh
7.5Ah - 270Wh / 1080Wh
8Ah - 280Wh / 1120Wh
9Ah - 324Wh / 1296Wh
12Ah - 432Wh / 1728Wh
I don't have one of these, but there's a testing video on YouTube that calculated an efficiency rate of 73% - which is about on par with the larger capacity battery power stations on the market I've seen.
FWIW, the best deal on a solar capable and 2000+Wh battery generator with solar input I've seen in the last few months is the Leoch 2000Wh (it's actually underrated and is 2200Wh) on Amazon for $924 (Clip coupon, then Google for the current additional discount code). It has its pros and cons, but a very good deal, LiFePo4, has solar input, has automatic switching for UPS functionality, and it runs at 84% efficiency. Hobotech on YouTube has two review videos that really go in depth on testing and features.
Kind of.... Solar Charging RYOBI 40V Batteries [youtube.com]
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A good review [youtube.com], this RYi1802 unit was not ready for prime time, nor does it meet specifications.... Perhaps Gen 2 version will improve.
From everything I have read, it really likes four 6amp or larger 40v batteries. From all the deals, most have plenty of 4amp, but you still have to somehow charge them.
For the type of money required to set this up to run 1400 watts or so steady and still need some way to charge the batteries, I would use scalable solar from 12 to 48v to 12v to 48v battery storage to invert out and call it a day... but wind has it's possibilities.
It's totally reliant on you adding in Ryobi 40v batteries, upto 4 of them