New release! Anker SOLIX C1000 Portable Power Station. Normal price is $999.00, but down to $749.99 with coupon.
Product Features:
1,056Wh Long-lasting LFP Battery
Expandable to 2,112Wh
1,800W Pure Sine Wave AC Output
Run 2,400W Loads With SurgePadâ„¢
HyperFlashâ„¢ AC Input, 0-100% in 58 mins
Max. 600W Solar Input
Remote App Control
5-year Warranty & 10-year Lifespan.
Anker deal:
https://www.anker.com/products/a1761?ref=naviBar&discount=WSCPGWCSQM​ [anker.com]
Code: WSCPGWCSQM
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C5C89...tails&th=1
Leave a Comment
9 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oq4GRMg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJewvTO
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lWJoU_F
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank DaddyGrant
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oq4GRMg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJewvTO
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lWJoU_F
Maybe this will help - From StopWatchGod on Reddit:
As for AC inverter, both have 1,800W inverters, but the EcoFlow has a 2,700W surge vs 2,400W for the Anker. The Anker does however have a better selection of AC outputs, with 5 3-prong 15A outlets and 1 20A outlet, vs 4 2-prong outlets and 2 20A outlets on the EcoFlow. As for 12V DC outputs, both have car sockets that max out at 10A, but the EcoFlow also has 2x 5521 outlets that share the 10Amps. They don't have as many use cases as the car socket, but they're there for some situations.
As for USB ports, the EcoFlow has 2x 12W USB-A ports, 2x 18W USB-A ports, and 2x 100W USB-C ports. The Anker has 1x 100W port, similar to the EcoFlow, and according to Anker's live stream it supports charging the power station unlike the EcoFlow, but the other USB-C port is only 30W, and the 2x USB-A ports are only 12W, like the EcoFlow's standard A ports. The EcoFlow definitely wins in this regard.
As for AC recharging, the Anker pulls up to 1300W, vs 1200W for the EcoFlow. But that's not all. The ANker also has, presumably, a more aggressive charging curve, allowing for a full charge in just 58 minutes, vs just 80 minutes for the EcoFlow. The Anker wins here.
For DC/Solar recharging, the Anker pulls up to 600W vs 500W for the EcoFlow. However, it's not as simple as that. Both can pull up to 60V, but the EcoFlow can pull up to 15A vs 12.5A for the Anker. Therefore the EcoFlow has a higher amp limit at the same voltage, to reach a lower peak solar input vs the Anker. Therefore while the Anker has a higher solar input, and can therefore recharge faster, it's much harder to reach that input vs the EcoFlow. It's a tie between the two.
The EcoFlow does however support the EcoFlow ecosystem, with the Extra battery port supporting powering the Wave 2 portable AC with DC power, Turning off and on the Smart Generator when the battery is low, and charing off of it via DC power which is more efficient, and support for the PowerStream Kit, which is similar to the Solix E1600 Solarbank expect the same power station is also used as the battery instead of a seperate one.
I picked up an off-brand LiFePO4 1500w for 650 about 6 months ago and it does absolutely fantastic.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Seems like a lot of work to lug it around to set it up just in case you think there might be an outage
if somebody was doing something crucial on their computer they could just switch to a laptop.
I also read that it doesn't switch back over to AC power when it comes back on, so that also limits its usage
on a side note it seems like this kind of makes the powerhouse 757 seem like a bad buy price wise l, but I guess prices on power stations have dropped a whole lot since 2020
Seems like a lot of work to lug it around to set it up just in case you think there might be an outage
if somebody was doing something crucial on their computer they could just switch to a laptop.
I also read that it doesn't switch back over to AC power when it comes back on, so that also limits its usage
on a side note it seems like this kind of makes the powerhouse 757 seem like a bad buy price wise l, but I guess prices on power stations have dropped a whole lot since 2020
Leave a Comment