EcoFlow has
EcoFlow DELTA Pro 3600Wh Portable Power Station + Smart Home Panel on sale for
$2588.81 when you apply coupon code
EF6PCTOFF.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member
MinhTrinh for finding this deal.
Product Details:- Professional electrician installation required; installation fees not included.
- The portable home battery: DELTA Pro supports a 3.6kWh capacity that can be expanded all the way to 25kWh. The kicker? You can integrate it directly with your home circuits via the Smart Home Panel. Ideal for home backup.
- Power pretty much anything: DELTA Pro leads the industry when it comes to AC output. With 3600W you've got a portable generator that can power heavy-duty appliances such as dryers, AC units & more. Need even more power? Pair two units together to hit a massive 7200W.
- A smart home battery system Made specifically for the DELTA Pro ecosystem, the Smart Home Panel connects the DELTA Pro portable power station right to your home's wiring.
- Backup power for essential home appliances When the grid goes down, the Smart Home Panel instantly switches to battery backup mode using any connected DELTA Pro units. Your home will go on strong with up to 7200W of power and 25kWh of energy when properly equipped.
- EcoFlow app control Monitor, control, and manage energy through the EcoFlow app. The app gives real-time metrics and lets you avoid peak rates.
- Peak rate avoidance If you're on a time-of-use billing rate, you can use the Smart Home Panel and attached DELTA Pros to store energy when rates are low and consume it when rates are high.
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Add on $290 ($29 x 10) for the necessary relays and the math looks something like:
$2725 + 290 = $3015 for Delta Pro and SHP.
That's better than I could put together in a similar deal:
Delta Pro standalone: $2449 (Costco price)
Smart Home Panel with relays: $999 (Ecoflow site and others)
$2449 + 999 = $3448
Hmm decisions decisions…
Many lifePO4 batteries are dropping in price at the moment. So the decision between a pre-built system like the Delta Pro vs DIY with separate components is difficult atm.
For those wanting to understand these Ecoflow products and/or other DIY options checkout the Ecoflow subreddit or visit diysolarforum.com. Those are much better places to get technical info rather than SD.
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Or you can save the battery to use when TOU is high like 4pm-9pm
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank bloodwrz
Either way that's a huge capacity battery and looks like you can daisy chain them up. Pretty cool technology. I wonder what the life of the battery is.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Martog
Agreed. This is good deal.
Add on $290 ($29 x 10) for the necessary relays and the math looks something like:
$2725 + 290 = $3015 for Delta Pro and SHP.
That's better than I could put together in a similar deal:
Delta Pro standalone: $2449 (Costco price)
Smart Home Panel with relays: $999 (Ecoflow site and others)
$2449 + 999 = $3448
Hmm decisions decisions…
Many lifePO4 batteries are dropping in price at the moment. So the decision between a pre-built system like the Delta Pro vs DIY with separate components is difficult atm.
For those wanting to understand these Ecoflow products and/or other DIY options checkout the Ecoflow subreddit or visit diysolarforum.com. Those are much better places to get technical info rather than SD.
Either way that's a huge capacity battery and looks like you can daisy chain them up. Pretty cool technology. I wonder what the life of the battery is.
From the linked page
"That gives you a potential 240V, 7200W output and 25kWh of capacity..."
7200W would give you 30 amps continuous. I would be concerned about inrush current of say a central A/C unit. Maybe the battery can handle it but it's still something to consider.
You're also limited to 10 circuits based on the transfer switch (Smart Home Panel).
I had a similar setup with a 10kW natural gas Generac generator but eventually moved to a 200 amp transfer switch and installed a smart module on the A/C circuit to prevent it from kicking on if it would push the generator past it's maximum current. Now I don't need to run extension cords to equipment I didn't have when the generator was put in.
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