Woot via Amazon has
Grecell 240W 154Wh/ 48000mAh LiFePO4 Portable Power Station (T200, Black) for
$59.99.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to community member
StrongMoney163 for sharing this deal.
Features:
- 240W portable power supply with 153.6Wh/48,000mAh capacity and 5 output ports, 2 input options.
- Supports 100W Type-C fast charging; 100W USB-C PD adapter required for full speed (wall charger not included).
- Compact and portable at 4.5 lbs
- LED light with SOS and multiple modes, plus built-in phone stand.
- Uses durable LiFePO4 batteries with overvoltage, undervoltage, short circuit, and overload protection.
- Includes: power station, USB-C cable, DC-to-cigarette lighter adapter, and user manual.
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Top Comments
Don't expect this to run a hair dryer, or a cooking plate, or a fridge, it's definitely more of a cell phone charger with bulk than a solar generator mini.
If you're looking for more laptop and cell phone charging while camping or away from sockets or power and don't want to use an inverter in your car, this can be a decent option. If you're looking for a lightweight solar generator, maybe an expandable unit or a unit that can connect to external lifepo4 batteries might be more appropriate.
I'm just saying, from my perspective, this doesn't have a real use case for me. I have plenty of USB power banks for anything this unit would be practical for, I have actual LiFePo4 batteries that run my LED strips while camping, and I recently sold all my solar panels and generators since they weren't getting much use and I run into a wall plug often enough between my adventures that I just top off my capacity there. If you need something to run light strips, charge cellphones and laptops (on usb c), this could be an ok unit if you make it back to a wall plug every other night or every other other night to top it off or can charge it while running a car.
One could discreetly charge this in a coffee shop or McDonald's, or take this bike-packing. Maybe they have higher energy needs for field equipment while out on foot.
16 Comments
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IT's review's are solid just pull the trigger on it for $60 plus it can be charged with solar panels is a definite buy 3,000+ charge cycle
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Siwy12
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank antsam9
Don't expect this to run a hair dryer, or a cooking plate, or a fridge, it's definitely more of a cell phone charger with bulk than a solar generator mini.
If you're looking for more laptop and cell phone charging while camping or away from sockets or power and don't want to use an inverter in your car, this can be a decent option. If you're looking for a lightweight solar generator, maybe an expandable unit or a unit that can connect to external lifepo4 batteries might be more appropriate.
I'm just saying, from my perspective, this doesn't have a real use case for me. I have plenty of USB power banks for anything this unit would be practical for, I have actual LiFePo4 batteries that run my LED strips while camping, and I recently sold all my solar panels and generators since they weren't getting much use and I run into a wall plug often enough between my adventures that I just top off my capacity there. If you need something to run light strips, charge cellphones and laptops (on usb c), this could be an ok unit if you make it back to a wall plug every other night or every other other night to top it off or can charge it while running a car.
Don't expect this to run a hair dryer, or a cooking plate, or a fridge, it's definitely more of a cell phone charger with bulk than a solar generator mini.
If you're looking for more laptop and cell phone charging while camping or away from sockets or power and don't want to use an inverter in your car, this can be a decent option. If you're looking for a lightweight solar generator, maybe an expandable unit or a unit that can connect to external lifepo4 batteries might be more appropriate.
I'm just saying, from my perspective, this doesn't have a real use case for me. I have plenty of USB power banks for anything this unit would be practical for, I have actual LiFePo4 batteries that run my LED strips while camping, and I recently sold all my solar panels and generators since they weren't getting much use and I run into a wall plug often enough between my adventures that I just top off my capacity there. If you need something to run light strips, charge cellphones and laptops (on usb c), this could be an ok unit if you make it back to a wall plug every other night or every other other night to top it off or can charge it while running a car.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank blocky
Don't expect this to run a hair dryer, or a cooking plate, or a fridge, it's definitely more of a cell phone charger with bulk than a solar generator mini.
If you're looking for more laptop and cell phone charging while camping or away from sockets or power and don't want to use an inverter in your car, this can be a decent option. If you're looking for a lightweight solar generator, maybe an expandable unit or a unit that can connect to external lifepo4 batteries might be more appropriate.
I'm just saying, from my perspective, this doesn't have a real use case for me. I have plenty of USB power banks for anything this unit would be practical for, I have actual LiFePo4 batteries that run my LED strips while camping, and I recently sold all my solar panels and generators since they weren't getting much use and I run into a wall plug often enough between my adventures that I just top off my capacity there. If you need something to run light strips, charge cellphones and laptops (on usb c), this could be an ok unit if you make it back to a wall plug every other night or every other other night to top it off or can charge it while running a car.
One could discreetly charge this in a coffee shop or McDonald's, or take this bike-packing. Maybe they have higher energy needs for field equipment while out on foot.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank antsam9
One could discreetly charge this in a coffee shop or McDonald's, or take this bike-packing. Maybe they have higher energy needs for field equipment while out on foot.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank mykidsdadx3
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank dearmas54
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