eco-worthy-us via eBay has ECO-WORTHY 130W Portable Flexible Solar Panel (Various) on sale for $69.99 - $14 when you apply coupon code YEARENDFINDS at checkout = from $55.99. Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member SickerDealer for sharing this deal.
Our research indicates that this deal is $14 less (20% savings) for 1-Panel than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $69.99 at the time of this posting.
Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
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eco-worthy-us via eBay has ECO-WORTHY 130W Portable Flexible Solar Panel (Various) on sale for $69.99 - $14 when you apply coupon code YEARENDFINDS at checkout = from $55.99. Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member SickerDealer for sharing this deal.
Our research indicates that this deal is $14 less (20% savings) for 1-Panel than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $69.99 at the time of this posting.
Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
They should be labeled as 130 watt 1, 2, and 4 packs, not 130, 260, and 520w panels, suggesting they are singular but higher-wattage panels. Super good deal, just a bit misleading.
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They should be labeled as 130 watt 1, 2, and 4 packs, not 130, 260, and 520w panels, suggesting they are singular but higher-wattage panels. Super good deal, just a bit misleading.
I have a EcoFlow smaller battery backup that I would like a couple of solar panels for. How do I know what these connects are called? I'm trying to find something that would work with EcoFlow, anyone with some of this knowledge, please help me out.
I have a EcoFlow smaller battery backup that I would like a couple of solar panels for. How do I know what these connects are called? I'm trying to find something that would work with EcoFlow, anyone with some of this knowledge, please help me out.
The connectors on these panels are called MC4. You will need to buy an adapter, I don't think any of the smaller Ecoflow batteries have the port or come with the right adapter
I have a EcoFlow smaller battery backup that I would like a couple of solar panels for. How do I know what these connects are called? I'm trying to find something that would work with EcoFlow, anyone with some of this knowledge, please help me out.
You'll need to get a special cable off Amazon. Bought the rigid 200W panel from the same vendor and the max input is around 135 Watts. Not as good as the 200 Watt foldable panel from Ecoflow.
Newbie to this technology. Is it possible to charge phones and other devices using this, or something similar, during an extended power outage? Any advice is appreciated.
I have one of these. In ideal conditions I've only been able to get about 78 watts from it.
Noted. When I set my camper trailer up with panels, I bought several different brands and ran some high noon tests ideally aimed. Outputs were 60-90%. 78/130=60%, bad.
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Newbie to this technology. Is it possible to charge phones and other devices using this, or something similar, during an extended power outage? Any advice is appreciated.
Not directly. Panel output voltage is too high. You'll need a controller to step down voltage. Panels like this are meant as a part of a system with final output going into battery storage. Easier setup for your case would be a small solar power bank like this: https://a.co/d/2jqVHtN
I have one of their flexible 180 watt panels. It performed well for the first 6 mo or so, and I got probs 130w max out of it at peak hours. But eventually the plastic backing cracked and now it only produces 40w max.
Newbie to this technology. Is it possible to charge phones and other devices using this, or something similar, during an extended power outage? Any advice is appreciated.
you could get this and add a charge controller for your application such as this https://a.co/d/ayrFciW. This would do what you are wanting.
However I'd recommend using this to charge a battery bank of some kind. I use an anker battery bank that I can plug directly into and it works as a solar charge controller and battery bank for charging, that does add cost of course so cheapest route is using the charge controller to USB output directly.. It's probably like 80-150$ cheaper without the battery however. I use an older version of this battery bank https://a.co/d/4osb1m1 , if you went with this you would also need a cable adapter such as https://a.co/d/2C7Qc2o .. I don't know of a direct MC4 connect battery bank off the top of my head.
Anyone know what adapter would be needed to plug into Jackery 3000?
https://a.co/d/2iJW5Ch Here is an everything adapter.
It looks like the Jackery 3000 has an 8mm DC input jack. So if you wanted to just get that connect only for a litttle cheaper https://a.co/d/5ChH9fS
The connectors on these panels are called MC4. You will need to buy an adapter, I don't think any of the smaller Ecoflow batteries have the port or come with the right adapter
Thanks for responding. I have the Ecoflow River 3 Plus. It has an orange plug for solar on the back. It's the one that Costco has had a few times in the past year.
From the link to the Amazon adaptor, my cable looks like the XT60 but in Orange... the cable connector looks to be yellow in the picks.
Last edited by Ryan_C December 29, 2025 at 11:32 AM.
Thanks for responding. I have the Ecoflow River 3 Plus. It has an orange plug for solar on the back. It's the one that Costco has had a few times in the past year.
From the link to the Amazon adaptor, my cable looks like the XT60 but in Orange... the cable connector looks to be yellow in the picks.
Yes, all of the ecoflow solar batteries, including yours, use the XT60 connector for solar power input. Most solar panels have MC4 connectors, so you just need an MC4 to XT60 cable to link the two. If you're using more than one solar panel on a single battery, you'll also need an MC4 Y/branch adapter/splitter.
But check the maximum solar power input on your battery first, because each battery has a limit on how much wattage it will accept (I have a tenergy that only accepts 45W). The RIVER 3 Plus will take 220 watts of power, so a couple of these panels would be fine, three might be overkill. But if you're only getting 78 watts out of these panels, as another poster mentioned, then three panels would get you to 234 watts, which actually isn't overkill. It all depends on how fast you want to power up your battery. You won't hurt your ecoflow by linking too many of these kinds of panels, it can just become a waste of resources.
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Not recommending that one, just an example.
However I'd recommend using this to charge a battery bank of some kind. I use an anker battery bank that I can plug directly into and it works as a solar charge controller and battery bank for charging, that does add cost of course so cheapest route is using the charge controller to USB output directly.. It's probably like 80-150$ cheaper without the battery however. I use an older version of this battery bank https://a.co/d/4osb1m1 , if you went with this you would also need a cable adapter such as https://a.co/d/2C7Qc2o .. I don't know of a direct MC4 connect battery bank off the top of my head.
It looks like the Jackery 3000 has an 8mm DC input jack. So if you wanted to just get that connect only for a litttle cheaper https://a.co/d/5ChH9fS
Thanks for responding. I have the Ecoflow River 3 Plus. It has an orange plug for solar on the back. It's the one that Costco has had a few times in the past year.
From the link to the Amazon adaptor, my cable looks like the XT60 but in Orange... the cable connector looks to be yellow in the picks.
From the link to the Amazon adaptor, my cable looks like the XT60 but in Orange... the cable connector looks to be yellow in the picks.
But check the maximum solar power input on your battery first, because each battery has a limit on how much wattage it will accept (I have a tenergy that only accepts 45W). The RIVER 3 Plus will take 220 watts of power, so a couple of these panels would be fine, three might be overkill. But if you're only getting 78 watts out of these panels, as another poster mentioned, then three panels would get you to 234 watts, which actually isn't overkill. It all depends on how fast you want to power up your battery. You won't hurt your ecoflow by linking too many of these kinds of panels, it can just become a waste of resources.
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