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frontpageVioletHaddock489 | Staff posted Feb 15, 2026 08:47 PM
frontpageVioletHaddock489 | Staff posted Feb 15, 2026 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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Top Comments

WoodSlayR
1073 Posts
244 Reputation
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
WoodSlayR
1073 Posts
244 Reputation
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!
WoodSlayR
1073 Posts
244 Reputation
These aren't for home backup power. good lord. These are just one step up from a usb power bank, and are super great for people that understand what they are for. Everything is about expectations. You can always let yourself down with any product you buy if your expectations are more than what the product is ever intended to do, but on the other hand, if your expectations are realistic. They are awesome!

69 Comments

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Feb 16, 2026 11:28 PM
427 Posts
Joined Nov 2019
LiquidIQFeb 16, 2026 11:28 PM
427 Posts
Quote from gridStorm :
Source? I only see $650, but my internet skills are poor
There are a few different configurations, the one with just the battery backup is still $449 (small print "with code" which seems to apply automatically.

https://oupes.com/products/oupes-...00w-2232wh
Feb 17, 2026 02:11 AM
1,019 Posts
Joined Dec 2019
golfreakFeb 17, 2026 02:11 AM
1,019 Posts
Anyone interested in this unit will thank me later by looking at the Oupes Mega 1 for $50 more at $299.
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.
Feb 17, 2026 03:21 AM
291 Posts
Joined Sep 2020
ThriftyThread5737Feb 17, 2026 03:21 AM
291 Posts
Quote from AmusedLake9040 :
They validate it via video then send you the replacement, both my warranties they let me keep the failed units.
That's pretty good !
1
Feb 17, 2026 03:28 AM
291 Posts
Joined Sep 2020
ThriftyThread5737Feb 17, 2026 03:28 AM
291 Posts
Quote from SmartBike8066 :
How many outages are you people having? May want to move. The justifications are hilarious.
I live in a rural area and when I drive by the suburbs a little bile backs up in my throat thinking of living on top of other people like that again! No thank you! The thing is when my power goes out I am all set up to deal with it when the power goes out in the city it is chaos because everyone has 1-2 meals worth of food in their house! I can live here for a year easily! 2 full fridges a XL deep freeze full of food and then a pantry on top of that! I just lost power for 8 days, reactivated my Starlink internet ran my generator and a kerosene space heater and was perfectly fine except for it was a bit inconvenient! Had to heat water in my microwave to take a shower for those days.
1
Feb 17, 2026 03:35 AM
291 Posts
Joined Sep 2020
ThriftyThread5737Feb 17, 2026 03:35 AM
291 Posts
Quote from rczrider :
Okay, maybe folks in this thread can help me decide if this will do what I want.

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?
I am not enough of an expert to way in on all the pros and cons of which one of those is a better fit for you. One point though is 12v power usually can only supply 100 watts so that will charge any power station very slowly. Now does your EV supply more I have no idea you can check and can the power station charge up with over 100 watts of 12v don't know either another thing to check on. Pure sine way being needed is way way overhyped IMO. The research I have done on the subject leads me to believe that yes "dirty power" can damage electronics but only the lowest tier of low quality electronics and even the then it was mostly an issue in the past to how electronics were designed and these days the electronics used can easily handle dirty power just fine. If you see something with pure sine wave then sure its a bonus but if you find something that is not pure sine wave that otherwise meets your needs I wouldn't pass that item up for lack of pure sine wave.
1
Feb 17, 2026 04:03 AM
831 Posts
Joined Nov 2008
reapermanFeb 17, 2026 04:03 AM
831 Posts
Quote from golfreak :
Anyone interested in this unit will thank me later by looking at the Oupes Mega 1 for $50 more at $299.
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.
Your correct, way better deal, repped.
Feb 17, 2026 01:45 PM
2,728 Posts
Joined Jun 2014
rczriderFeb 17, 2026 01:45 PM
2,728 Posts
Quote from ThriftyThread5737 :
I am not enough of an expert to way in on all the pros and cons of which one of those is a better fit for you. One point though is 12v power usually can only supply 100 watts so that will charge any power station very slowly. Now does your EV supply more I have no idea you can check and can the power station charge up with over 100 watts of 12v don't know either another thing to check on. Pure sine way being needed is way way overhyped IMO. The research I have done on the subject leads me to believe that yes "dirty power" can damage electronics but only the lowest tier of low quality electronics and even the then it was mostly an issue in the past to how electronics were designed and these days the electronics used can easily handle dirty power just fine. If you see something with pure sine wave then sure its a bonus but if you find something that is not pure sine wave that otherwise meets your needs I wouldn't pass that item up for lack of pure sine wave.
It's a DC-DC converter (~400V to ~13.8V) that maxes out at 130A, but is recommended not to exceed 83A. 1000W continuous is definitely not a problem, 1200W continuous is almost certainly fine, surges of 1600W are okay.

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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Feb 17, 2026 03:11 PM
8 Posts
Joined Oct 2020
Narko113Feb 17, 2026 03:11 PM
8 Posts
Have caution ordering from their website. They do not have the ability to accept cancellation requests for orders, you can only email or call within a 24-hour cancellation period but their phone service sends you to voicemail and states they will reply the next business day. Their email auto-responder has a message about Chinese New Year affecting their response between "11:00 on February 14 to 11:00 on February 23(EST)", which is when this big sale is. Also it seems odd to me their business address is in California, their phone area code is as well, but their hours are in EST on their responses and websites.
Feb 17, 2026 04:42 PM
39 Posts
Joined Oct 2006
AdidasPhiFeb 17, 2026 04:42 PM
39 Posts
The idle consumption of this unit is 16.5W per hour.
1
Feb 17, 2026 07:42 PM
90 Posts
Joined Oct 2019
RealDealForRealFeb 17, 2026 07:42 PM
90 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!
Who runs a generator all day to play a radio while camping?

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.
Feb 17, 2026 07:54 PM
19,037 Posts
Joined Feb 2010
BinarFeb 17, 2026 07:54 PM
19,037 Posts
Quote from Narko113 :
Have caution ordering from their website. They do not have the ability to accept cancellation requests for orders, you can only email or call within a 24-hour cancellation period but their phone service sends you to voicemail and states they will reply the next business day. Their email auto-responder has a message about Chinese New Year affecting their response between "11:00 on February 14 to 11:00 on February 23(EST)", which is when this big sale is. Also it seems odd to me their business address is in California, their phone area code is as well, but their hours are in EST on their responses and websites.
China product. Once you buy you are SOL if you need any help . For some worth the price but this have no QC. Hard pass
Feb 17, 2026 10:19 PM
162 Posts
Joined Oct 2021
LivelyWallaby1957Feb 17, 2026 10:19 PM
162 Posts
This seems awfully low compared to similarly powered systems

Solar Charging: 240W max, 12–30V DC (MPPT 16–26V, 12A max)
Feb 17, 2026 10:53 PM
222 Posts
Joined Jun 2008
IamcuriasFeb 17, 2026 10:53 PM
222 Posts
I bought the Exodus 2400 with the 240 solar panel. I've had it couple of weeks. These are my observations. Great bang for the buck. It takes twice the money to get the same size. I used an electric heater to test it. It's pretty simple. You have so many WHs. That's what you have to use. Surge worked fine. It is a little loud when the fan kicks in. When I got the 2400 for some reason the panel wasn't with it. I emailed them at 3pm and by 10 am I had a reply that panel would be there in two days. The initial shipment took 2 days. I'm in CA so I'm close to their facility. I am happy with my purchase. The quality seems nice. You just can't beat the price. I bought mine directly from Oumes. My price was 646$ for the 2400 and 240 solar panel.
Feb 17, 2026 10:55 PM
222 Posts
Joined Jun 2008
IamcuriasFeb 17, 2026 10:55 PM
222 Posts
Quote from Binar :
China product. Once you buy you are SOL if you need any help . For some worth the price but this have no QC. Hard pass
That's not correct. I emailed them about my order and got a reply within 12 hours. They shipped the part at the same time. That's not bad at all. My understanding is that people complain about how slow the other companies are. I heard Anker was good.

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Feb 17, 2026 10:59 PM
222 Posts
Joined Jun 2008
IamcuriasFeb 17, 2026 10:59 PM
222 Posts
Quote from Binar :
China product. Once you buy you are SOL if you need any help . For some worth the price but this have no QC. Hard pass
Name me a Battery Backup that's not made in China. I only know of 1 made in this country. The big exception is that some are made in Viet Nam.

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