Costco [costco.com] has the
EcoFlow DELTA Pro 3600Wh EV Recharge Bundle for
$2,599.99. Shipping is free.
EcoFlow DELTA Pro 3600Wh EV Recharge Bundle [costco.com] -
$2,599.99
EcoFlow DELTA Pro 3600Wh EV Recharge Bundle with Solar Panel [costco.com]- $3,299.99
Feature 1:A power generator for your appliances during a blackout. Power up 4500W devices with X-Boost. Enough for heaters or window AC units.
Feature 2:The world's fastest charging portable power station.MultiCharge delivers record-breaking speeds at 6500W including AC Wall Outlet, Solar Panel, Smart Generator, recharge at thousands of EV stations worldwide.
Feature 3: This battery power station sports an LFP battery. Get 6500+ full cycles to last for years. Ideal for outdoor camping & travel.
Feature 4: Use the clear-to-read LCD screen or EcoFlow App to conveniently monitor and control your home backup battery.
Feature 5:You Could Apply for 30% Tax Credit*, When You Install DELTA Pro as a Home Power Solution, learn more
https://blog.ecoflow.com/us/guide...ax-credit/
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1080W - 3 hours" for $2600 plus tax, what a joke. Another money making hype like $400 plastic yeti cooler.
1080W - 3 hours" for $2600 plus tax, what a joke. Another money making hype like $400 plastic yeti cooler.
These can just stay inside, where as generator has to be located outside and is generally quite loud.
I would think this can probably power a small refrigerator for about 10-12 hours.
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3600 wh = 3.6 kwh x $.216 (current rate in my area per kWh) = $.77 + delivery charge of approximately $1.40 (cost is ~ double the supply rate per kWh) = $2.17/day x 365 = $792/year
Unit rated for 6500 full cycles ÷ 365 = 17.8 years
If the electric supply and delivery rates never went up this would save me approximately $14k over it's lifetime on my electric bill with a net savings of about $12k after the 30% tax credit.
These can just stay inside, where as generator has to be located outside and is generally quite loud.
I would think this can probably power a small refrigerator for about 10-12 hours.
I tested my son's 3.3 cubic refrigerator/freezer (2 doors) and I averaged about 17-18 watts over a 24 hour period (it was filled with water bottles and cooled down at start).
That come out to about 300 watt-hours a day. Let's just go with 360 to make the math easier.
In that case the EcoFlow will run it for 10+ days (not hours).
I have a smaller EcoFlow unit (720 Watt-hours) and in my test, it ran my garage 16 cubic feet refrigerator for 18+ hours.
I tested my son's 3.3 cubic refrigerator/freezer (2 doors) and I averaged about 17-18 watts over a 24 hour period (it was filled with water bottles and cooled down at start).
That come out to about 300 watt-hours a day. Let's just go with 360 to make the math easier.
In that case the EcoFlow will run it for 10+ days (not hours).
I have a smaller EcoFlow unit (720 Watt-hours) and in my test, it ran my garage 16 cubic feet refrigerator for 18+ hours.
I have portable fridges that run at the lowest, 39 watts.
I have portable fridges that run at the lowest, 39 watts.
I ran it for 24 hours, took the total power usage and decided it by 24 hours. That gives the average watt-hours per hour, and therefore the average running watts.
This is the one.
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Arctic.../325293929
My full size garage ready Samsung with an inverter converter averaged 27 watt-hours.
To test for a power outage situation, I added a timer with a one hour on, 3 hours off duty cycle and got it down to an average of 19 watts and kept everything cold during the test.
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