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frontpageWoodSlayR posted Jan 16, 2026 04:45 PM
frontpageWoodSlayR posted Jan 16, 2026 04:45 PM

OUPES Exodus 1500 1500W 1488Wh LiFePO4 Portable Power Station

+ Free Shipping

$303

$549

44% off
OUPES
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Deal Details
Oupes has OUPES Exodus 1500 1500W 1488Wh LiFePO4 Portable Power Station for $319 (discount automatically applied in cart) - $15.95 with discount code JP5 = $303.05. Shipping is free.

Thanks Community Member WoodSlayR for sharing this deal & korg for contributing to this deal

Features:
  • Exodus 1500: 1,488Wh Capacity | 1,500W AC Pure Sine Wave Inverter (1,700W Boost Mode)
  • LiFePO4 Battery with 3,500+ Life Cycles to 80%
  • 10 Outputs For Multiple Devices
  • 4 Ways to Recharge (Car Charging/AC Charging/PV Charging/AC+PV Charging)
  • Instant UPS Backup < 20ms
  • Smart HD LCD display
  • 1,280W Max. Input charging speed (AC + Solar)
  • Exodus 1500 Net Weight: 30.5 lbs

Editor's Notes

Written by slickdewmaster | Staff
  • About this Offer:
    • This sale price beats this previous FrontPage Deal for 1070Wh Model for $332.
  • Warranty:

Original Post

Written by WoodSlayR
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Oupes has OUPES Exodus 1500 1500W 1488Wh LiFePO4 Portable Power Station for $319 (discount automatically applied in cart) - $15.95 with discount code JP5 = $303.05. Shipping is free.

Thanks Community Member WoodSlayR for sharing this deal & korg for contributing to this deal

Features:
  • Exodus 1500: 1,488Wh Capacity | 1,500W AC Pure Sine Wave Inverter (1,700W Boost Mode)
  • LiFePO4 Battery with 3,500+ Life Cycles to 80%
  • 10 Outputs For Multiple Devices
  • 4 Ways to Recharge (Car Charging/AC Charging/PV Charging/AC+PV Charging)
  • Instant UPS Backup < 20ms
  • Smart HD LCD display
  • 1,280W Max. Input charging speed (AC + Solar)
  • Exodus 1500 Net Weight: 30.5 lbs

Editor's Notes

Written by slickdewmaster | Staff
  • About this Offer:
    • This sale price beats this previous FrontPage Deal for 1070Wh Model for $332.
  • Warranty:

Original Post

Written by WoodSlayR

Community Voting

Deal Score
+79
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Top Comments

WoodSlayR
1068 Posts
244 Reputation
You can simply expand your total capacity and double your output wattage by buying another complete unit. Adding expansion batteries add capacity but not output power, so theirs that. Redundancy with these types of electronics is a good thing. Consider when you add an expansion battery, you are still limited to the one inverter in the main unit. If the main unit goes bad, you lose your capacity to everything. Having 2 identical units solves this problem. I'm not saying it's better for everyone, I'm just pointing out the pros of having a fully functional second unit over expanding a single unit.
Mjoelnir
34 Posts
14 Reputation
Right, 16.6(period) ms, but the first thing your power supply does with the 60Hz sine input •°•.• is to run it through a full bridge rectifier, which turns it into 120Hz half-wave •°•°•, which means you get full peak voltage to charge your input capacitors every 8.3(period) ms. Depending on the design of the input stage of the PSU and the load, 20 ms can result in the voltage dipping enough to cause a reboot. 20ms can mean you miss 3 half cycles if the timing is unfortunate (outage starting on the rise of a half cycle).
Azrael_the_Cat
5073 Posts
793 Reputation
I suppose you COULD use this instead. However, I'd stick with a UPS for UPS things, A real UPS will generally switch faster (10ms or less) while the Oupes has a switch time of 20ms. Either might be fine, but maybe under full load your computer MIGHT not make it through two and a half half cycles at 60Hz. I can't say for sure. ATX 3.1 is only required to hold up power for 12ms at full load so technical you might drop a computer (reboot or power off) when running on the Oupes vs a real UPS while gaming.

TLDR: don't do it, you might not get what you want.

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Feb 01, 2026 02:47 AM
3,479 Posts
Joined Jun 2006
DAC21Feb 01, 2026 02:47 AM
3,479 Posts
Quote from drdusty :
Good deal. But step up to the 2400 if your budget allows it. The 2400 has 2232wh and only about $140 more currently. much more capable - i own one and like it.
Concur, anyone that lives in an area subject to blackouts lasting more than a few hours should be looking for a solar generator with a lot more capacity. Running even a small 800 watt microwave on this thing is stupid talk, the battery will be shot in 35 minutes let alone anything else plugged in.

If you are serious about outages that could go on for a few days I would be looking at a layered set up of 3000wh solar generator, a 2000+ watt dual fuel generator and 600w+ of solar panels to keep the lights on, refrigerators cold and a window mounted a/c unit humming for a few days or more.
Last edited by DAC21 January 31, 2026 at 07:56 PM.
1
Feb 01, 2026 03:42 AM
550 Posts
Joined Oct 2011
blupupherFeb 01, 2026 03:42 AM
550 Posts
Quote from WoodSlayR :
No, the app is pretty basic. You can adjust the speed of the charging but you cant set a fixed charging limit, like 80% or anything. It only charges to 100%
App is very lacking IMO.
I am coming from EcoFlow which has a decent app with a lot of options. This one is more of a monitoring app than one you can do anything with.
The switch between fast and slow charge is about the only option you have (and even then, it can't be powering anything or be charging). You can't change high and low charge percent (it is just 100% charge and down to 0% discharge). You can't adjust solar input times or priority.
I like my ecoflow units better (especially better than the Mega 1 that will only do 400 watts max output if below 20% charge).
As I posted above, I got these for my kids to use in their apartments, so they don't care, they just have them plugged into the wall all the time till they need it.
Feb 01, 2026 07:22 AM
1,307 Posts
Joined Mar 2009
lurewarsFeb 01, 2026 07:22 AM
1,307 Posts
Quote from tchop55 :
Damn just got a refurb Delta 2 the other day for $299. Maybe I should of waited...
Personally I would keep the delta 2. Even refurbed at $299 over this oupes new for the same price. Despite the 50% increase in battery.

Why? Because this unit hasn't faired very well in testing at all. Also has been known to fry out fairly easily. The delta 2 is a quality made unit as far as these types of power stations go. It also has no problem hitting its rated wattage. I've been three separate power outages with my delta 2 units. I'm able to cook for the fam using a full power microwave or mostly our counter top convection oven. That oven cycles as high as nearly 1700 intervals while cooking. The delta 2 has no problem running it. This unit definitely won't do that.
Feb 01, 2026 09:17 AM
1,363 Posts
Joined Sep 2008
slipperybargainsmanFeb 01, 2026 09:17 AM
1,363 Posts
Quote from WoodSlayR :
Could you share the link? I think you might be confusing it with an OUPES 1800W model that has a 1488Wh capacity, but was listed on sale at $539 a while back on SD. Is this the one your talking about?
https://slickdeals.net/f/17438622-oupes-1200w-992wh-portable-power-station-399-oupes-1800w-1488w-539-more-free-shipping?src=SDSearchv3&attrsrc=Thread%3AExpired%3ATrue%7CSearch%3AType%3Anormal%7CSearch%3ASort%3Arelevance%7CSearch%3AHideExpired%3Afalse
If you go to the Oupes site under their flash sale it's this: https://oupes.com/products/oupes-...er-station

So yea, looks to e the same one but for $299.
Original Poster
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Feb 01, 2026 03:26 PM
1,068 Posts
Joined Jul 2019
WoodSlayRFeb 01, 2026 03:26 PM
Original Poster
Pro
1,068 Posts
Quote from lurewars :
Personally I would keep the delta 2. Even refurbed at $299 over this oupes new for the same price. Despite the 50% increase in battery.

Why? Because this unit hasn't faired very well in testing at all. Also has been known to fry out fairly easily. The delta 2 is a quality made unit as far as these types of power stations go. It also has no problem hitting its rated wattage. I've been three separate power outages with my delta 2 units. I'm able to cook for the fam using a full power microwave or mostly our counter top convection oven. That oven cycles as high as nearly 1700 intervals while cooking. The delta 2 has no problem running it. This unit definitely won't do that.
known to fry out fairly easily?
Feb 02, 2026 02:37 AM
1,307 Posts
Joined Mar 2009
lurewarsFeb 02, 2026 02:37 AM
1,307 Posts
Quote from WoodSlayR :
known to fry out fairly easily?
https://youtu.be/Gt0XqVI0WL8?si=svehcjv07LLOcHcT
This review and a few other none infomercial reviews did not look favorable at all. Worse yet, if you read the comment section, they're generally overall, not very favorable to this unit. Maybe I'm being unfair, any units can have problems.
I was just thinking back to about a year ago, and they were dumping a bunch of these units on temu. They kept sending out 120off 300 coupons. You could get this around $240. I ended up with another Delta 2 for $260. I've had nothing but great luck with those units. They've been rock stars during outages.
Original Poster
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Feb 02, 2026 05:12 AM
1,068 Posts
Joined Jul 2019
WoodSlayRFeb 02, 2026 05:12 AM
Original Poster
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1,068 Posts

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

Quote from lurewars :
https://youtu.be/Gt0XqVI0WL8?si=svehcjv07LLOcHcT
This review and a few other none infomercial reviews did not look favorable at all. Worse yet, if you read the comment section, they're generally overall, not very favorable to this unit. Maybe I'm being unfair, any units can have problems.
I was just thinking back to about a year ago, and they were dumping a bunch of these units on temu. They kept sending out 120off 300 coupons. You could get this around $240. I ended up with another Delta 2 for $260. I've had nothing but great luck with those units. They've been rock stars during outages.
I dunno, I feel like the majority of reviews I run into review them favorably so I don't know. Most people will vouch for Bluetti, EcoFlow and othe big name brands but if you go to Ebay, you can find dozens if not hundreds of refurbs of these brands at any given time. These reburb units were all once customer returns like defective units and so forth. They get sent back, fixed and cant be sold as new anymore so gets resold as refurbs, so take that for what you will. The return % rate in the consumer electronic industry in general is crazy high and much higher than most people would imagine. Now consider that these power stations are basically 4 or 5 individual standalone consumer electronic devices all crammed into 1 shell. A Basic LiFePo battery, a BMS, a solar charge controller, an AC charger, an AC Inverter, and an entire DC electronics side with numerous DC ports. Basically there's a plethora of things that can go wrong with them and any 1 thing that goes wrong can cause a product to be returned. I expect to see some bad reviews mixed into reviews for any brand but you really have to watch a large number and take many things into consideration. For example, A person here on SD said this was a bad product and pointed out an unfavorable review about this product but when I watched the review, the guy was a complete idiot and it was 100% user error that caused a bad review, so not all bad reviews should be treated equally.
Last edited by WoodSlayR February 1, 2026 at 10:25 PM.
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Feb 02, 2026 07:14 PM
134 Posts
Joined Jul 2017
Slurm93Feb 02, 2026 07:14 PM
134 Posts
Has anyone done a tear down to see what battery cells they use in these things? I'm a little paranoid after watching the company that audited thousands of 18650 battery cells for known safety design flaws on tested.

It's worth a watch:
https://youtu.be/-Y23nfAOiXQ
1
Feb 02, 2026 07:29 PM
452 Posts
Joined Dec 2007
wcsFeb 02, 2026 07:29 PM
452 Posts
Quote from Slurm93 :
Has anyone done a tear down to see what battery cells they use in these things? I'm a little paranoid after watching the company that audited thousands of 18650 battery cells for known safety design flaws on tested.

It's worth a watch:
https://youtu.be/-Y23nfAOiXQ
I haven't watched the full thing but this video is regarding traditional lithium ion batteries. Power stations have almost all gone LiFePO4 which are a lot safer. At first they were almost all made with traditional lithium ion, so whatever you buy make sure it advertises lifepo4.


Not saying this makes things completely safe but a lot safer. Also off brands may just say one thing and do another, but OUPES seems big enough at this point to be trusted to use the battery chemistry they are advertising.
Feb 09, 2026 12:30 AM
1,549 Posts
Joined Jan 2014
look30Feb 09, 2026 12:30 AM
1,549 Posts
1
Feb 09, 2026 06:47 AM
291 Posts
Joined Nov 2014
electricintakeFeb 09, 2026 06:47 AM
291 Posts
They will give you the worst run around if you're trying to return something to them.
Feb 09, 2026 02:02 PM
3,346 Posts
Joined Jun 2017
NikonShrFeb 09, 2026 02:02 PM
3,346 Posts
So many deal on these things...which to get?
Feb 09, 2026 06:34 PM
458 Posts
Joined Jan 2007
butalearnerFeb 09, 2026 06:34 PM
458 Posts
Quote from NikonShr :
So many deal on these things...which to get?
Check out Project Farm's power station review from yesterday (linked a couple posts above this), I've purchased several items based on his videos and he hasn't steered me wrong yet.
Feb 13, 2026 12:05 AM
322 Posts
Joined Nov 2006
Nacho1545Feb 13, 2026 12:05 AM
322 Posts
Thanks for the notice. Picked up with a 240w panel too. Citi card 3 month pay off for 0 fee.

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Feb 28, 2026 04:26 AM
4 Posts
Joined Aug 2011
huyvietFeb 28, 2026 04:26 AM
4 Posts
Quote from WoodSlayR :
No, that's completely incorrect. He never even depleted the battery, it was still at a 24% state of charge when he destroyed it. That boneheaded hillbilly was doing a torture test by running a continuous 1400 watt load from a hair dryer, (which would've ran all day, until the battery died) but on top of that, he decided to plug in a vacuum cleaner and then non stop and continuously flipped the on/off switch on and off to a vacuum cleaner while simultaneously running a 1400 watt hair dryer, until he broke it. Nobody runs equipment like this. He far exceeded what it's rated at. That vacuum probably drew another 1500 watts (probably a lot more actually from the surge) on top of the 1400 watts already on it. That guy is a complete bonehead. Who tests equipment like this? To anyone that wants to see this tard in action, you can fast forward the video and watch from the 6:17 mark to see for yourself exactly what he was doing to actually kill it, and make you own call. He didn't just simply deplete it, thats complete nonsense. I counted 34 switches, or 17 times he flipped it completely on and off continuously before he broke it for good.
I agree. However, the system should have designed better with a circuit breaker for overload protection instead of totally damaged.

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