SOLARPLAY Factory Power Station Store via AliExpress has
2160Wh SOLARPLAY Q2501 2400w LiFePO4 Portable Power Station on sale for $475.30 - $100 with promo code
IFP1IEG during checkout =
$375.69.
Shipping is free.
Note: Price may fluctuate slightly. You must be signed into your AliExpress account and have your address added to add items to your cart and place an order. To add your address, go to Settings via the drop-down menu at the top of the page, then select Shipping Address. If it says it cannot ship to your location, please make sure you have correct address added in your profile. You may have to manually type in the promo code to apply it at checkout. Ships from USA warehouse.
Thanks to Deal Editor
iconian for finding this deal.
Features:- 12 different output ports: AC, DC, USB-A and USB-C ports that charge all important electronic products.
- This solar generator can be charged by AC connection and solar panels (MAX 2 x 200 W solar panels)
- BMS (battery management system)
- UPS function
- Battery: Lithium Battery, 3500+ Lifecycle
- Battery Capacity: 2160Wh/2400W
- Max Output: 4800W
- Input Power: 300W, 500W, 700W, 1100W
- Output Ports: 2/4xAC, 2xDC, 1xXT60, 1xCar Ignition, 6xUSB
Leave a Comment
Top Comments
Some notes I found interesting: The inverter starts at 110V which is a bit low already, and if you use a 50ft+ extension cord and pull say 1000W with this it's possible you end up with 100V at your load which is bad. As you add more load the voltage drops alarmingly as well. If you get to 2400W and above it just keeps dropping the voltage instead of tripping. The review shows under 90V at one point. This was tested at 1.7kwh capacity, so about 80% of rated capacity (85-88% is common in this class). My take: If you have non-sensitive equipment and want a battery that draws low wattage for a reasonable amount of time, this is decent. But this doesn't perform like other 2kwh batteries from what I've seen.
65 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Realistically, are people really going to be using something like this to power 3 hair dryers at the same time? You would never consider doing that on a 20amp home circuit so would would you be doing that on this thing? Those torture tests some reviewers put these things through isn't realistic. You're not making coffee, running a saw and powering a heater at same time.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Some notes I found interesting: The inverter starts at 110V which is a bit low already, and if you use a 50ft+ extension cord and pull say 1000W with this it's possible you end up with 100V at your load which is bad. As you add more load the voltage drops alarmingly as well. If you get to 2400W and above it just keeps dropping the voltage instead of tripping. The review shows under 90V at one point. This was tested at 1.7kwh capacity, so about 80% of rated capacity (85-88% is common in this class). My take: If you have non-sensitive equipment and want a battery that draws low wattage for a reasonable amount of time, this is decent. But this doesn't perform like other 2kwh batteries from what I've seen.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
If you want to expand your existing all-in-one battery, you either have to buy an expansion battery from the company (if possible), or do something like what you're doing, which has inefficiencies. Plugging a bare lifepo4 battery directly into the solar inputs of your Jackery (if possible) would be more efficient than charging it from another all-in-one, and probably cheaper, but you'd have the challenge of charging the lifepo4 after you used it. Lifepo4 chargers are cheap, but require 120v, and you could even charge it FROM the Jackery when you had excess power. Or you could get a charge controller and solar for it. If you're at home, this might be simple enough to do after an outage. If you're remote, and you have panels for the Solarplay too, daisy chaining multiple all-in-one batteries might be better for you. You can see it somewhat depends on use case.
Leave a Comment