AnkerDirect via Amazon has for Prime Members: Anker 548 Power Bank 60,000mAh Portable Charger Power Station (Green or Gray) for $79.99 - $5 when you redeem the discount on the product page or enter promo code 0UQMWIGU at checkout = $74.99. Shipping is free.
Thanks to Deal Hunter phoinix for finding this deal.
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AnkerDirect via Amazon has for Prime Members: Anker 548 Power Bank 60,000mAh Portable Charger Power Station (Green or Gray) for $79.99 - $5 when you redeem the discount on the product page or enter promo code 0UQMWIGU at checkout = $74.99. Shipping is free.
Thanks to Deal Hunter phoinix for finding this deal.
Model: Anker Power Bank Power Station 60,000mAh,Portable Outdoor Generator 87W with Smart Digital Display, Retractable Auto Lighting and SOS Mode, Home Backup(PowerCore Reserve 192Wh) for Travel, Camping
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I do not recommend these unless you can deal with a low draw cut off. If you plug in your phone to charge overnight, it will shut down the port on you when there is a very low draw.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank madmax718
I do not recommend these unless you can deal with a low draw cut off. If you plug in your phone to charge overnight, it will shut down the port on you when there is a very low draw.
I do not recommend these unless you can deal with a low draw cut off. If you plug in your phone to charge overnight, it will shut down the port on you when there is a very low draw.
Wait, it just shuts off and stops charging if you're trying to charge a smaller device? That's like the sole purpose of the device haha, I have this sitting in my cart about to buy.
Our use case is basically for camping long weekends. I use my phone as white noise and just generally to charge things while off the grid. Usually our camp spots don't have electric hookups.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank magixx
Quote
from jstein1313
:
Wait, it just shuts off and stops charging if you're trying to charge a smaller device? That's like the sole purpose of the device haha, I have this sitting in my cart about to buy.
Our use case is basically for camping long weekends. I use my phone as white noise and just generally to charge things while off the grid. Usually our camp spots don't have electric hookups.
A lot of powerbanks have this feature where they basically ignore low power draw devices. Some powerbanks have a special mode where you can force it on for 2 hours but after that it will shut down again.
The "solution" to this is to use a load generator board (niche and hard to find) or a PD trigger board which is much more common and will keep the port on indefinitely.
A lot of powerbanks have this feature where they basically ignore low power draw devices. Some powerbanks have a special mode where you can force it on for 2 hours but after that it will shut down again.
The "solution" to this is to use a load generator board (niche and hard to find) or a PD trigger board which is much more common and will keep the port on indefinitely.
I just bought the river 2 refurb for $119, think it's less than 10 lbs, why not just go with that? Or will I be dealing with this issue on that device as well for low power (phone) devices?
For anyone, who like me, has been hoping for a sale on the similar but smaller Anker SOLIX C200 DC:
Same capacity (192 Wh), same chemistry
This is larger (C300-ish in size)
This is heavier (5.75lbs vs 4.2lbs)
This has one less USB-C port, and appears to charge at slower speeds (67W/27W)
This has a light on top
Size and weight are top of my list, so I'm still holding out, but if you don't mind the size and would appreciate the camping light, this is a decent little LFP station for camping or power outages. 67W is less than 140W but I think for most people, that won't matter all that much for such a small station.
Last edited by tsuehpsyde July 10, 2025 at 06:37 AM.
For anyone, who like me, has been hoping for a sale on the similar but smaller Anker SOLIX C200 DC:
Same capacity (192 Wh), same chemistry
This is larger (C300-ish in size)
This is heavier (5.75lbs vs 4.2lbs)
This has one less USB-C port, and appears to charge at slower speeds (67W/27W)
This has a light on top
Size and weight are top of my list, so I'm still holding out, but if you don't mind the size and would appreciate the camping light, this is a decent little LFP station for camping or power outages. 67W is less than 140W but I think for most people, that won't matter all that much for such a small station.
I probably won't have much use for it but earlier this year there were crazy fires here in CA and power was shut off, ended up using all my battery flashlights, Ecoflow River and milwaukee work lights the entire night, this will come in handy it happens again.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank madmax718
Our use case is basically for camping long weekends. I use my phone as white noise and just generally to charge things while off the grid. Usually our camp spots don't have electric hookups.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank magixx
Our use case is basically for camping long weekends. I use my phone as white noise and just generally to charge things while off the grid. Usually our camp spots don't have electric hookups.
The "solution" to this is to use a load generator board (niche and hard to find) or a PD trigger board which is much more common and will keep the port on indefinitely.
The "solution" to this is to use a load generator board (niche and hard to find) or a PD trigger board which is much more common and will keep the port on indefinitely.
I found a video explaining more indeph >> https://youtu.be/WBkPMYv_7cY?si=
- Same capacity (192 Wh), same chemistry
- This is larger (C300-ish in size)
- This is heavier (5.75lbs vs 4.2lbs)
- This has one less USB-C port, and appears to charge at slower speeds (67W/27W)
- This has a light on top
Size and weight are top of my list, so I'm still holding out, but if you don't mind the size and would appreciate the camping light, this is a decent little LFP station for camping or power outages. 67W is less than 140W but I think for most people, that won't matter all that much for such a small station.Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
- Same capacity (192 Wh), same chemistry
- This is larger (C300-ish in size)
- This is heavier (5.75lbs vs 4.2lbs)
- This has one less USB-C port, and appears to charge at slower speeds (67W/27W)
- This has a light on top
Size and weight are top of my list, so I'm still holding out, but if you don't mind the size and would appreciate the camping light, this is a decent little LFP station for camping or power outages. 67W is less than 140W but I think for most people, that won't matter all that much for such a small station.Leave a Comment