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)
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Top Comments
By the way, This is the egg cooker I use, its freakin awesome.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0B9P17...tle_4
69 Comments
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https://oupes.com/products/oupes-...00w-2232wh
Better in everyway plus probably higher quality components.
I've seen plenty of reviews on the Exodus line and many have had problems.
The Mega 1 is 2000w vs 1200w and that is a huge difference. 2000w will let you run most if not all household electronics.
The charging capabilities are superior too. 1400 ac vs 600w.
The solar inputs for this Exodus is horrible.
We have an EV, but the EV does not support V2L or V2H, so the only way to tap into that is to use an inverter hooked up to the 12V and put the car in "camp mode" so it'll keep the LV battery topped up using the HV battery. I was looking at spending $200-ish to get a quality pure sine inverter to use with the garage fridge, but if I can hook this up to the to the EV's 12V if necessary (like if it drops below 20% or something), this might be a better use of the money.
Thoughts?
Better in everyway plus probably higher quality components.
I've seen plenty of reviews on the Exodus line and many have had problems.
The Mega 1 is 2000w vs 1200w and that is a huge difference. 2000w will let you run most if not all household electronics.
The charging capabilities are superior too. 1400 ac vs 600w.
The solar inputs for this Exodus is horrible.
Pure sine might be over-hyped, but it won't hurt and my budget allows for it. I'd rather get it and not need it than use it for something that is sensitive to it and regret my purchase.
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I get your thinking if you compare it to at-home usage, but when most people go camping their energy usage is much different than at home. I use my 1.5KWH pack to run my 12v cooler for ~2.5 days if I don't bring a solar panel. If I do bring a panel I can stay out indefinitely in the summer and even do some cooking with my induction burner as well. Besides the 12v cooler I don't run anything all day and for that application its terrific.
I agree a generator is a better tool for day-long power outages. But I'd also add they work great in tandem with generators. Most of a typical workday I only need to run my workstation and my router/modem. I can easily run that for 6 hours off my 1.5KWH pack and can charge it while I run the larger generator to cool the fridge/freezer and run more power hungry appliances.
I've personally found a lot more uses for these types of powerstations than I even thought I would since getting my first one several years ago.
Solar Charging: 240W max, 12–30V DC (MPPT 16–26V, 12A max)
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