Aaoyun US via Amazon has Aaoyun 296Wh 80000mAh Portable Power Station (AOY-320) for $129.99 - $35.10 when you 'clip' 27% off coupon on the product page - $39 when you apply promo code WQTL7GYM at checkout = $55.89. Shipping is free.
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Aaoyun US via Amazon has Aaoyun 296Wh 80000mAh Portable Power Station (AOY-320) for $129.99 - $35.10 when you 'clip' 27% off coupon on the product page - $39 when you apply promo code WQTL7GYM at checkout = $55.89. Shipping is free.
Note: You must be logged in to clip coupons and apply promo codes; coupons and promo codes are typically for one-time use and don't always apply seamlessly. If you run into this issue, refresh the page, re-apply the coupon/code, or revisit the cart page.
Thanks to Deal Hunter doublehelixx for finding this deal.
Our research indicates that this deal is $43.11 less (43.5% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $99 at the time of this posting.
Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
Model: Aaoyun Portable Power Station 300W, 296Wh Solar Generator with 100W USB-C In/Output, Night Light & LED Flashlight, Compact Camping Battery with Strap for Outdoor CPAP Home Backup Emergency
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Right, here is one of the 1 star review:
"Couldn't even use an electric kettle. Lame product."
WTF? you expect to power up a 1000W+ electric kettle from a 300W power station?
Or another one complaining it comes without solar panels... hold tight... Idiocracy here we come!
36 Comments
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Cartoonish and will probably die within a couple years, but I could see a use case at this price. Shitty jack of all trades, master of none, checks all the boxes and has a decent 100W charging input and solar input. If nothing else it could be a huge phone charger and light. Similar to other poor quality batteries, don't charge it too long, and don't discharge it all the way, or you have a high risk of it degrading rapidly or becoming unresponsive.
Also, 300W AC output is extremely low and borderline useless in today's USB-C powered world, so don't expect it to power a 1500W kettle, like one 1-star reviewer believed. Also the power needed to simply keep the inverter on, even with 0W usage, will quickly drain your battery.
Last edited by Farmeroak March 16, 2026 at 04:46 PM.
80,000 mAh is very misleading. At the very best, if the company isn't lying, which is a big "IF" because they can legally lie about capacity, the same way companies can legaly lie about amplifier wattage, and flashlights can lie about lumen output.. At the very best, it's the simply the total amp-hour rating which is rated at 3.7volts, which is the nominal voltage for the Li-Ion cells used to build the pack. Since 3.7volts is basically unusable for anything, it will need to be upped & converted to something useful. At this point you can throw the 80,000mAh rating out the window because it's meaningless to the real-world capacity of the power station. I found dozens of reviews on YouTube for this but not one single capacity test. This thing is garbage, and I'd bet my left testicle or my firstborn child it's nowhere near its advertised capacity. But in its defense, it wouldn't need to be a full 296Wh to still be a good deal. It could still be a usable amount of power, relatively speaking of course. Even just half of 296Wh is right at 150Wh which would still be a fair price at $56. I just have my doubts it's even that.
Last edited by WoodSlayR March 16, 2026 at 07:48 PM.
Right, here is one of the 1 star review: "Couldn't even use an electric kettle. Lame product." WTF? you expect to power up a 1000W+ electric kettle from a 300W power station? Or another one complaining it comes without solar panels... hold tight... Idiocracy here we come!
Wow.... lol. People just need to learn basic understanding of power usage and then they can figure out what they need.
Not saying all battery packs are safe but I'm buying from brands that have a little more reputation. If packs are starting to bulge, they're immediately getting recycled.
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Quote
from StrategyFreak
:
The capacity numbers don't add up at all. I would avoid this
Sure they do. They might be lying, but nothing about the numbers doesn't add up. 300ish watt hours is about 80000mah at 3.7v, they use 20 cells, so 4000mah each. The 4000mah per cell capacity could certainly be a very generous estimate though. But nothing about those numbers "don't add up"
Last edited by TealActivity1814 March 17, 2026 at 07:56 AM.
80,000 mAh is very misleading. At the very best, if the company isn't lying, which is a big "IF" because they can legally lie about capacity, the same way companies can legaly lie about amplifier wattage, and flashlights can lie about lumen output.. At the very best, it's the simply the total amp-hour rating which is rated at 3.7volts, which is the nominal voltage for the Li-Ion cells used to build the pack. Since 3.7volts is basically unusable for anything, it will need to be upped & converted to something useful. At this point you can throw the 80,000mAh rating out the window because it's meaningless to the real-world capacity of the power station. I found dozens of reviews on YouTube for this but not one single capacity test. This thing is garbage, and I'd bet my left testicle or my firstborn child it's nowhere near its advertised capacity. But in its defense, it wouldn't need to be a full 296Wh to still be a good deal. It could still be a usable amount of power, relatively speaking of course. Even just half of 296Wh is right at 150Wh which would still be a fair price at $56. I just have my doubts it's even that.
Uh, duh, of course it's 3.7 volts because it's using cylindrical li-ion batteries. It's a useful comparison because amp hours at 3.7 volts is what almost every power bank (which also use li-ion) is going to list it's capacity in. It clearly tells you actual watt hours to eliminate any uncertainty for equal comparisons against other power stations as well that may use lifepo4. There wasn't any question on what 80ah meant. You're not revealing any major insights here.
Last edited by TealActivity1814 March 17, 2026 at 07:50 AM.
Looking at the reviews, it seems to put out close to the rated capacity. There seem to be higher than average reliability issues with early death or slower than normal charging speed. And this review has a video showing it smoking: https://www.amazon.com/gp/custome...tl?ie=UTF8
For the low price it's might be worth a shot keeping in mind like most no name Li-Ion powered products use it with a plan on how to deal with it spontaneously burning up, and always be present during charging when risk is highest and have a way to put out the fire if the worse happens. This can happen to brand name products too, but parts quality tend to be lower on no name brands.
Gonna run 2 samsung mx-st50b off of this while doing farmers walks outside. Running extension cords was quite the endeavor. Should be g2g, the st50b uses 240 watts max and I doubt it ever really hits that number while plugged in. I will still need to bring a surge protector out to be able to plug both of em in but that's way easier than a 100ft ext cable ectera!
Last edited by Baron_O_BeefStick March 17, 2026 at 11:18 AM.
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"Couldn't even use an electric kettle. Lame product."
WTF? you expect to power up a 1000W+ electric kettle from a 300W power station?
Or another one complaining it comes without solar panels... hold tight... Idiocracy here we come!
36 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Also, 300W AC output is extremely low and borderline useless in today's USB-C powered world, so don't expect it to power a 1500W kettle, like one 1-star reviewer believed. Also the power needed to simply keep the inverter on, even with 0W usage, will quickly drain your battery.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank TealActivity1814
For the low price it's might be worth a shot keeping in mind like most no name Li-Ion powered products use it with a plan on how to deal with it spontaneously burning up, and always be present during charging when risk is highest and have a way to put out the fire if the worse happens. This can happen to brand name products too, but parts quality tend to be lower on no name brands.
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