Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
Heads up, this deal has expired. Want to create a deal alert for this item?
expiredRed_Liz | Staff posted Apr 09, 2025 08:37 PM
expiredRed_Liz | Staff posted Apr 09, 2025 08:37 PM

ECO-WORTHY 600W Wind Turbine Generator + Solar Panel Kit w/ Battery For Home $640 + Free Shipping

$640

$800

20% off
eBay
30 Comments 13,464 Views
Visit eBay
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Eco-Worthy-US via eBay [ebay.com] has ECO-WORTHY 600W Wind Turbine Generator + Solar Panel Kit w/ Battery For Home on sale for $799.99 - $160 (20%) off when you apply coupon code OUTLET20 on the checkout page = $639.99. Shipping is free.

Includes:
  • 2x 100W Solar Panels
  • 1x 400W Wind Turbine Generator + 40A PWM Hybrid Controller
  • 1x 12V 100Ah LiFePO4 Lithium Ion Battery
  • 1x 1100w 12v-120v Inverter
  • Required accessories
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Eco-Worthy-US via eBay [ebay.com] has ECO-WORTHY 600W Wind Turbine Generator + Solar Panel Kit w/ Battery For Home on sale for $799.99 - $160 (20%) off when you apply coupon code OUTLET20 on the checkout page = $639.99. Shipping is free.

Includes:
  • 2x 100W Solar Panels
  • 1x 400W Wind Turbine Generator + 40A PWM Hybrid Controller
  • 1x 12V 100Ah LiFePO4 Lithium Ion Battery
  • 1x 1100w 12v-120v Inverter
  • Required accessories

Community Voting

Deal Score
+7
Good Deal
Visit eBay

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

30 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Apr 10, 2025 01:02 AM
381 Posts
Joined Aug 2011
strawApr 10, 2025 01:02 AM
381 Posts
I'm interested
Apr 10, 2025 01:11 AM
541 Posts
Joined Sep 2012
Jas6681Apr 10, 2025 01:11 AM
541 Posts
Newbie here. Will this be good enough solely to charge my EV and garage? (Upper Midwest)
3
4
Apr 10, 2025 01:28 AM
1,332 Posts
Joined Sep 2010
dkd711Apr 10, 2025 01:28 AM
1,332 Posts
Quote from Jas6681 :
Newbie here. Will this be good enough solely to charge my EV and garage? (Upper Midwest)
Heck no
1
Apr 10, 2025 01:45 AM
1,500 Posts
Joined May 2006
UltraLazerApr 10, 2025 01:45 AM
1,500 Posts
Quote from Jas6681 :
Newbie here. Will this be good enough solely to charge my EV and garage? (Upper Midwest)
A tesla model 3 is 50kwh. So if this was making energy full blast, which will rarely happen. It would take 84 hrs minimum, thats sun all the time. If you had 16 of these. Then it might be more possible.
Apr 10, 2025 03:32 AM
17 Posts
Joined Dec 2018
Brian8447Apr 10, 2025 03:32 AM
17 Posts
Quote from UltraLazer :
A tesla model 3 is 50kwh. So if this was making energy full blast, which will rarely happen. It would take 84 hrs minimum, thats sun all the time. If you had 16 of these. Then it might be more possible.
A model 3 gets between 3.5 and 5.5 mi per kWh, so this could give you 8.4 to 13.2 miles a day if it delivers the full 2.4 kWh
2
1
Apr 10, 2025 03:38 AM
107 Posts
Joined Jul 2021
NavareenDAOCApr 10, 2025 03:38 AM
107 Posts
Quote from Brian8447 :
A model 3 gets between 3.5 and 5.5 mi per kWh, so this could give you 8.4 to 13.2 miles a day if it delivers the full 2.4 kWh
I'm not sure how you got a daily capacity of 2.4 kwh? 400 w * 24h = 9600 and the solar panels, let's say 6 hours of sun = another 1200 watts. I know 400 watts from the wind power 24 hours a day is unrealistic but technically possible, at least for capacity reasons.
Apr 10, 2025 03:38 AM
1,262 Posts
Joined Dec 2007
cr-vtecApr 10, 2025 03:38 AM
1,262 Posts
Quote from Brian8447 :
A model 3 gets between 3.5 and 5.5 mi per kWh, so this could give you 8.4 to 13.2 miles a day if it delivers the full 2.4 kWh
If these weren't so large, I could see someone putting them on a Tesla or RV (to power onboard electronics). I'm bad with electric specs, but I assume it would create some drag and lower the efficiency of the vehicle?
4
3

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Apr 10, 2025 03:43 AM
1,291 Posts
Joined May 2013
TechManDadApr 10, 2025 03:43 AM
1,291 Posts
Quote from cr-vtec :
If these weren't so large, I could see someone putting them on a Tesla or RV (to power onboard electronics). I'm bad with electric specs, but I assume it would create some drag and lower the efficiency of the vehicle?
The amount of energy you gain would be canceled by losses to drag and heat.
Apr 10, 2025 03:47 AM
1,251 Posts
Joined Aug 2016
BatmansplumberApr 10, 2025 03:47 AM
1,251 Posts
Quote from Jas6681 :
Newbie here. Will this be good enough solely to charge my EV and garage? (Upper Midwest)
Newbie to 🌍? Welcome, green one!
3
5
Apr 10, 2025 04:08 AM
3,209 Posts
Joined May 2006
FarmeroakApr 10, 2025 04:08 AM
3,209 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Farmeroak

Quote from NavareenDAOC :
I'm not sure how you got a daily capacity of 2.4 kwh? 400 w * 24h = 9600 and the solar panels, let's say 6 hours of sun = another 1200 watts. I know 400 watts from the wind power 24 hours a day is unrealistic but technically possible, at least for capacity reasons.
Residential wind turbines unfortunately perform very poorly in all but the most extreme winds. Look up the countless Youtube reviews on small wind turbines. You'll find that most small turbines (let's say, less than 4kw) generate less than half, and often less than 25%, of the rated power, even at moderate winds. These turbines are rated at max wind speed, which is often way above what most people would encounter consistently, and usually at many feet above the ground on a pole, which is hard for most people. Expect to inconsistently get 10-50% of the rated power.

Small note as well, the amount of sun in an area is rated in "sun hours", and is typically 5 hours or less in most areas. After losses from a charge controller (and possible battery + inverter), the fact that panels reduce to around 80% of rated capacity once they get hot, and potential improper placement, you're lucky to get 70-80% of the rated power, and that's if the panels are true to their word.

Solar is hard, and wind is much harder.
2
Apr 10, 2025 04:19 AM
18 Posts
Joined Mar 2016
scientificnycApr 10, 2025 04:19 AM
18 Posts
Quote from Jas6681 :
Newbie here. Will this be good enough solely to charge my EV and garage? (Upper Midwest)
Not enough power.
Apr 10, 2025 06:17 AM
1,252 Posts
Joined Feb 2023
LivelySink338Apr 10, 2025 06:17 AM
1,252 Posts
How many of these do I need in my backyard to ditch my power provider?
1
Apr 10, 2025 11:40 AM
2,929 Posts
Joined Nov 2013
Col.TEDApr 10, 2025 11:40 AM
2,929 Posts
Quote from LivelySink338 :
How many of these do I need in my backyard to ditch my power provider?
a hundred or more....LOL
1
Apr 10, 2025 12:43 PM
1,631 Posts
Joined Nov 2017
revieweronlineApr 10, 2025 12:43 PM
1,631 Posts
Quote from UltraLazer :
A tesla model 3 is 50kwh. So if this was making energy full blast, which will rarely happen. It would take 84 hrs minimum, thats sun all the time. If you had 16 of these. Then it might be more possible.
someone mathed

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Apr 10, 2025 12:44 PM
1,631 Posts
Joined Nov 2017
revieweronlineApr 10, 2025 12:44 PM
1,631 Posts
Quote from Farmeroak :
Residential wind turbines unfortunately perform very poorly in all but the most extreme winds. Look up the countless Youtube reviews on small wind turbines. You'll find that most small turbines (let's say, less than 4kw) generate less than half, and often less than 25%, of the rated power, even at moderate winds. These turbines are rated at max wind speed, which is often way above what most people would encounter consistently, and usually at many feet above the ground on a pole, which is hard for most people. Expect to inconsistently get 10-50% of the rated power.

Small note as well, the amount of sun in an area is rated in "sun hours", and is typically 5 hours or less in most areas. After losses from a charge controller (and possible battery + inverter), the fact that panels reduce to around 80% of rated capacity once they get hot, and potential improper placement, you're lucky to get 70-80% of the rated power, and that's if the panels are true to their word.

Solar is hard, and wind is much harder.
bu..bu...but its 2025 and upgraded technology.. lol
1

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Popular Deals

Trending Deals