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frontpageVioletHaddock489 | Staff posted Yesterday 08:47 PM
frontpageVioletHaddock489 | Staff posted Yesterday 08:47 PM

OUPES Exodus 1200 992Wh 1200W LiFePO4 Portable Power Station

+ Free Shipping

$249

$549

54% off
OUPES
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Deal Details
OUPES has OUPES Exodus 1200 992Wh 1200W LiFePO4 Portable Power Station on sale for $549 - $300 off when you apply discount code EDS1200249 on the checkout page = $249. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Staff Member VioletHaddock489 for sharing this deal.

Specs:
  • Capacity: 992Wh
  • Battery Type: LiFePO4
  • Battery Lifecycle: >3500 cycles to 80% capacity
  • Battery Management System (BMS): Yes
  • Inputs:
    • Fast AC Charging: 600W max
    • Slow AC Charging: 300W
    • Solar Charging: 240W max, 12–30V DC (MPPT 16–26V, 12A max)
    • AC + Solar Charging: 840W max
    • Car Charging: 120W max
  • Outputs:
    • 3x AC Outlets (1200W continuous, 1500W Boost Mode, 3600W Surge, Pure Sine Wave, 120V/20A NEMA 5-20R)
    • 2x USB-C (140W max per port)
    • 2x USB-A (18W max each)
    • 2x DC5521 (12V/10A)
    • 1x Car Port DC (12V/10A)
  • UPS/EPS Switch Time: <20ms
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi 2.4GHz + Bluetooth
  • App Control: Yes
  • Pass-through Charging: Yes
  • IP Rating: IP21
  • Warranty: 5-Year Standard + 1-Year Extension w/ Registration (Up to 6 Years Total)

Editor's Notes

Written by jimmytx | Staff
  • Additional Information:
    • OUPES offers a 30-Day Money Back No Questions Asked return policy. For more details, visit here.
    • Priced at ~25.1 cents per watt hour for this portable power station.
    • Please see the original post for additional details and/or view the Wiki and forum comments for further helpful discussion if available.

Original Post

Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
OUPES has OUPES Exodus 1200 992Wh 1200W LiFePO4 Portable Power Station on sale for $549 - $300 off when you apply discount code EDS1200249 on the checkout page = $249. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Staff Member VioletHaddock489 for sharing this deal.

Specs:
  • Capacity: 992Wh
  • Battery Type: LiFePO4
  • Battery Lifecycle: >3500 cycles to 80% capacity
  • Battery Management System (BMS): Yes
  • Inputs:
    • Fast AC Charging: 600W max
    • Slow AC Charging: 300W
    • Solar Charging: 240W max, 12–30V DC (MPPT 16–26V, 12A max)
    • AC + Solar Charging: 840W max
    • Car Charging: 120W max
  • Outputs:
    • 3x AC Outlets (1200W continuous, 1500W Boost Mode, 3600W Surge, Pure Sine Wave, 120V/20A NEMA 5-20R)
    • 2x USB-C (140W max per port)
    • 2x USB-A (18W max each)
    • 2x DC5521 (12V/10A)
    • 1x Car Port DC (12V/10A)
  • UPS/EPS Switch Time: <20ms
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi 2.4GHz + Bluetooth
  • App Control: Yes
  • Pass-through Charging: Yes
  • IP Rating: IP21
  • Warranty: 5-Year Standard + 1-Year Extension w/ Registration (Up to 6 Years Total)

Editor's Notes

Written by jimmytx | Staff
  • Additional Information:
    • OUPES offers a 30-Day Money Back No Questions Asked return policy. For more details, visit here.
    • Priced at ~25.1 cents per watt hour for this portable power station.
    • Please see the original post for additional details and/or view the Wiki and forum comments for further helpful discussion if available.

Original Post

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21 Comments

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Pro
Yesterday 09:35 PM
1,006 Posts
Joined Jul 2019
WoodSlayR
Pro
Yesterday 09:35 PM
1,006 Posts

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

This is a really really good price per Wh (maybe even the best or at least close to the best amongst what's available right now) but the entire Oupes Exodus line has been on sale at these really good sale prices for months and months. I've been starting to wonder if the prices were ever going to go up. So far, they've stayed super affordable. I probably just jinxed it by saying this and tomorrow prices will go up. Better buy now!
Last edited by WoodSlayR February 15, 2026 at 02:37 PM.
1
2
Yesterday 10:40 PM
62 Posts
Joined Dec 2009
smiles233Yesterday 10:40 PM
62 Posts
also military or government employee discount through GOVX 5%
1
1
Yesterday 10:47 PM
493 Posts
Joined Dec 2014
MangekyoSharinganYesterday 10:47 PM
493 Posts
I am trying hard not to get another power station but the price on this OUPES is hard to stay away.
1
Yesterday 11:05 PM
493 Posts
Joined Dec 2014

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Yesterday 11:09 PM
3 Posts
Joined Jun 2019
DrewW2Yesterday 11:09 PM
3 Posts
$449 with the 240W solar panel... Seems like a good deal too
Yesterday 11:16 PM
1,313 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
JusthathoughtYesterday 11:16 PM
1,313 Posts
Quote from smiles233 :
also military or government employee discount through GOVX 5%
Military does not work. You can only use one discount code at a time for a purchase, so the military isn't enough to trump the code listed here.
...I use one for power recliner
Last edited by Justhathought February 15, 2026 at 05:03 PM.
Yesterday 11:26 PM
1,520 Posts
Joined Aug 2009
coolmannYesterday 11:26 PM
1,520 Posts
So is this like a UPS on steroids?

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Yesterday 11:27 PM
163 Posts
Joined Sep 2020
ThriftyThread5737Yesterday 11:27 PM
163 Posts
I like the idea of these but whenever I actually start doing the math they just don't seem that great. So this can put out 300 watts for maybe 2.5 hours. So for camping maybe I could play a radio all day or cook a couple meals on a hotplate but that's it and the item is spent until I am back on grid power. They all come with a car charger but when you do the math on that it is like 40 hours to charge it via car so you have to keep your car idling for 40 yours yea no thank you. I can see the use case for maybe a CPAP or other medical device in a power outage if that is all your are planning to run but other than that a small quiet generator like a Honda 1000 just seems like the better choice for 99% of people. People already steal generators I can't imagine how easy one of these would be to steal if you sit it outside with solar panels. Lightweight means easy to carry off and since they are silent I mean at least you can hear a generator turn off if it is running outside! Granted one of these fits in to the "better than nothing" catagory to recharge a cell phone or keep an led light or 2 on for a couple days but the use case seems very limited to me. Maybe if you live in an apartment without a balcony and just cant put a generator anywhere and again "better than nothing" I can see that. So if you bought one ( any brand) and use it tell me your use case and if it worked well or not for you!
Last edited by ThriftyThread5737 February 15, 2026 at 04:37 PM.
Pro
Yesterday 11:36 PM
1,006 Posts
Joined Jul 2019
WoodSlayR
Pro
Yesterday 11:36 PM
1,006 Posts
Quote from MangekyoSharingan :
I am trying hard not to get another power station but the price on this OUPES is hard to stay away.
Bro. welcome to my everyday struggle.
2
Pro
Yesterday 11:43 PM
1,006 Posts
Joined Jul 2019
WoodSlayR
Pro
Yesterday 11:43 PM
1,006 Posts
Quote from ThriftyThread5737 :
I like the idea of these but whenever I actually start doing the math they just don't seem that great. So this can put out 300 watts for maybe 2.5 hours. So for camping maybe I could play a radio all day or cook a couple meals on a hotplate but that's it and the item is spent until I am back on grid power. They all come with a car charger but when you do the math on that it is like 40 hours to charge it via car so you have to keep your car idling for 40 yours yea no thank you. I can see the use case for maybe a CPAP or other medical device in a power outage if that is all your are planning to run but other than that a small quiet generator like a Honda 1000 just seems like the better choice for 99% of people. People already steal generators I can't imagine how easy one of these would be to steal if you sit it outside with solar panels. Lightweight means easy to carry off and since they are silent I mean at least you can hear a generator turn off if it is running outside! Granted one of these fits in to the "better than nothing" catagory to recharge a cell phone or keep an led light or 2 on for a couple days but the use case seems very limited to me. Maybe if you live in an apartment without a balcony and just cant put a generator anywhere and again "better than nothing" I can see that. So if you bought one ( any brand) and use it tell me your use case and if it worked well or not for you!
Its good for certain things. For example, If your camping, you could use an 800watt hot water kettle that takes 5 to 7 minutes to boil water more than a dozen times before having to recharge it. You can also recharge from zero to full daily with about 300 watts of solar and good weather. Its def not designed to replace a gas gen but they have their uses. Do you really want to fire up a gas gen if all you needed to do was run your laptop, maybe charge your phone and run some led lighting in your tent for the night? This is perfect for that. Def cant compare them to a gas gen tho. Another great use for it, is I have an egg cooker that runs on just 400 watts and only takes 15 minutes to medium boil 6 eggs. This could medium to hard boil two dozen eggs and still just use less than half it's capacity or you could boil 48 eggs if you wanted to drain it completely. Thats a lot of eggs, especially considering you can charge it back to 100% in 4 to 5 hrs with around 300 watts of solar.
By the way, This is the egg cooker I use, its freakin awesome.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0B9P17...tle_4&th=1
Last edited by WoodSlayR February 15, 2026 at 06:06 PM.
1
Yesterday 11:57 PM
64 Posts
Joined Jul 2020
CalmBird519Yesterday 11:57 PM
64 Posts
Quote from ThriftyThread5737 :
I like the idea of these but whenever I actually start doing the math they just don't seem that great. So this can put out 300 watts for maybe 2.5 hours. So for camping maybe I could play a radio all day or cook a couple meals on a hotplate but that's it and the item is spent until I am back on grid power. They all come with a car charger but when you do the math on that it is like 40 hours to charge it via car so you have to keep your car idling for 40 yours yea no thank you. I can see the use case for maybe a CPAP or other medical device in a power outage if that is all your are planning to run but other than that a small quiet generator like a Honda 1000 just seems like the better choice for 99% of people. People already steal generators I can't imagine how easy one of these would be to steal if you sit it outside with solar panels. Lightweight means easy to carry off and since they are silent I mean at least you can hear a generator turn off if it is running outside! Granted one of these fits in to the "better than nothing" catagory to recharge a cell phone or keep an led light or 2 on for a couple days but the use case seems very limited to me. Maybe if you live in an apartment without a balcony and just cant put a generator anywhere and again "better than nothing" I can see that. So if you bought one ( any brand) and use it tell me your use case and if it worked well or not for you!
I agree, these deals are always so popular but are people really using these things or are they a hobby?
Today 12:00 AM
56 Posts
Joined Apr 2015
revelized1Today 12:00 AM
56 Posts
The best case use of these units is for direct power in indirect times. charge it up during the day using a generator or solar, and use the power during the night to keep lights on in your house during electrical outages, charge radios, flashlights, run a cpap, etc etc.

The people in dire situations im sure would rather have these than nothing when push comes to shove, and you dont want to leave your generator running all night for fear of thieves stealing it.

They are extremely portable too so it makes them usefull for getting simple power to locations that might need it but dont require a full generator. Multiple "van living" type people use these to run almost all their equipment for a vegabond lifestyle, and i use mine to supplement power around my house.

Quote from ThriftyThread5737 :
I like the idea of these but whenever I actually start doing the math they just don't seem that great. So this can put out 300 watts for maybe 2.5 hours. So for camping maybe I could play a radio all day or cook a couple meals on a hotplate but that's it and the item is spent until I am back on grid power. They all come with a car charger but when you do the math on that it is like 40 hours to charge it via car so you have to keep your car idling for 40 yours yea no thank you. I can see the use case for maybe a CPAP or other medical device in a power outage if that is all your are planning to run but other than that a small quiet generator like a Honda 1000 just seems like the better choice for 99% of people. People already steal generators I can't imagine how easy one of these would be to steal if you sit it outside with solar panels. Lightweight means easy to carry off and since they are silent I mean at least you can hear a generator turn off if it is running outside! Granted one of these fits in to the "better than nothing" catagory to recharge a cell phone or keep an led light or 2 on for a couple days but the use case seems very limited to me. Maybe if you live in an apartment without a balcony and just cant put a generator anywhere and again "better than nothing" I can see that. So if you bought one ( any brand) and use it tell me your use case and if it worked well or not for you!
Today 12:03 AM
163 Posts
Joined Sep 2020
ThriftyThread5737Today 12:03 AM
163 Posts
Quote from WoodSlayR :
Its good at certain things. For example, You could use an 800watt hot water kettle that takes 5 to 7 minutes to boil water more than a dozen times before having to recharge it. You can also recharge from zero to full daily with about 300 watts of solar and good weather. Its def not designed to replace a gas gen but they have their uses. Do you really want to fire up a gas gen if all you needed to do was run your laptop, maybe charge your phone and run some led lighting in your tent for the night? This is perfect for that. Def cant compare them to a gas gen tho. Another great use for it, is I have an egg cooker that runs at 400 watts and only takes 15 minutes to medium boil 6 eggs. This could medium boil 24 eggs and still just use less than half it's capacity or you could boil 48 eggs if you wanted to drain it completely. Thats a lot of eggs, especially considering you can charge it back to 100% in 4 hrs with around 300 watts of solar.
By the way, This is the egg cooker I use, its freakin awesome.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0B9P17...tle_4&th=1
If my power is out I want all the food in my refrigerator to stay cold as well so how many eggs and how many coffee pots in addition to keeping my fridge on for a say saying I can solar charge it daily ( if I have great sun every day and no clouds...if ) We just had winter storm Fern knock out power for 2 weeks here and I chained my generator to my house and it makes noise and I probably would notice if someone tried to run off with it ( its also 11,000 watts so pretty large and heavy to run off with) I thin one of these outside next to some solar panels sitting silently would be easy to steal. Even at a campsite I wouldn't want to leave one of these sitting out all day while I went hiking so would have to be locked to the campsite while solar charging IMO. Thanks for the input though always looking for other opinions on these.
1
Today 12:10 AM
163 Posts
Joined Sep 2020
ThriftyThread5737Today 12:10 AM
163 Posts
Quote from revelized1 :
The best case use of these units is for direct power in indirect times. charge it up during the day using a generator or solar, and use the power during the night to keep lights on in your house during electrical outages, charge radios, flashlights, run a cpap, etc etc.

The people in dire situations im sure would rather have these than nothing when push comes to shove, and you dont want to leave your generator running all night for fear of thieves stealing it.

They are extremely portable too so it makes them usefull for getting simple power to locations that might need it but dont require a full generator. Multiple "van living" type people use these to run almost all their equipment for a vegabond lifestyle, and i use mine to supplement power around my house.
I just went through 2 week power outage with the winter storm and I had my generator running 24/7. I also chained it to my house ( to the pillars on the front deck) but it is also a super large and heavy generator so would have to be slowly wheeled away and ramp loaded to a truck unless you had like 3 strong guys to lift it into a truck bed, point being it is a difficult to steal generator. It would take some planning couldn't just see it and grab it I wouldn't think.

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Pro
Today 12:13 AM
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Joined Jul 2019
WoodSlayR
Pro
Today 12:13 AM
1,006 Posts
Quote from ThriftyThread5737 :
If my power is out I want all the food in my refrigerator to stay cold as well so how many eggs and how many coffee pots in addition to keeping my fridge on for a say saying I can solar charge it daily ( if I have great sun every day and no clouds...if ) We just had winter storm Fern knock out power for 2 weeks here and I chained my generator to my house and it makes noise and I probably would notice if someone tried to run off with it ( its also 11,000 watts so pretty large and heavy to run off with) I thin one of these outside next to some solar panels sitting silently would be easy to steal. Even at a campsite I wouldn't want to leave one of these sitting out all day while I went hiking so would have to be locked to the campsite while solar charging IMO. Thanks for the input though always looking for other opinions on these.
LOL, Yeah, this isn't the product you'd want. It wont do what you need. Not even close. it's not even marketed to people that have those needs. You want something with an absolute bare minimum of 2kWh of capacity, but more is better and a minimum of 800watts of solar panel to top it off in under a days worth of sunshine but more is always better. If your looking for home backup power, this is a joke. It's not for that.
Last edited by WoodSlayR February 15, 2026 at 05:17 PM.

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