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Just spotted that Bluetti are now offering the AC200P power station for £1099. Ok it’s last years model but hey!
The specification:-
Now total the cost of all this seperately:-
200ah lithium battery £700
2000w pure sine wave inverter £200 (do they have surge capacity?)
Lithium battery 20amp charger £80
Various usb and 12v outlets and transformer £60
MPPT 700w solar charging controller £250
Case to contain all this free.
B2B charger £75
Duel charging capability £30
Visual display of all that is going on £40
Total £1435
Ok you need a decent solar panel (minimum 400w suggested for all year round U.K. use. 200w minimum for U.K. summer and all year round southern Europe use) and it’s not as fast charging as the latest models (4 hours with AC) but if I was in the market for more power for my motorhome or camper and didn’t want a workshop bespoke job with a lithium conversion, and retain the use of original equipment 12v system whilst providing an additional power reservoir over and beyond this, then I would go for it.
But I am not in the market as I already have a set up. An older Bluetti model built like a battleship. Just frustrated that I could have got this for less money!
We charge ebike batteries, run the kettle and toaster and hair dryer, charge mobile devices, run the 12v TV and AC DVD player with ours. And occasional use as hook up. Use lpg for the fridge. Minimises use of lead acid leisure battery.
You have to make up your own mind about the best way of moving forward with additional power requirements. If you go off grid with e-bikes then what do you do?
Really just highlighting what the costs are of separates relative to this current Bluetti offer. Without the time and installation costs.
And it can be charged with a cheap generator daytime when noise is less of an issue so that you have a silent night time power reservoir. Just a charging option that Bluetti do mention.
The specification:-
- 2000W AC Pure Sine Wave Inverter (4,800W Surge)
- 2,000Wh Capacity
- LiFePO4 Battery with 3,500+ Life Cycles to 80%
- 13 Outputs For Multiple Devices
- 7 Ways to Recharge (AC/Solar/Car/Generator/Lead battery/Dual AC/AC+Solar)
- 700W Max. Solar Input
- 1200W Max. Fast Dual Charging (Solar + AC Adapter Simultaneously)
Now total the cost of all this seperately:-
200ah lithium battery £700
2000w pure sine wave inverter £200 (do they have surge capacity?)
Lithium battery 20amp charger £80
Various usb and 12v outlets and transformer £60
MPPT 700w solar charging controller £250
Case to contain all this free.
B2B charger £75
Duel charging capability £30
Visual display of all that is going on £40
Total £1435
Ok you need a decent solar panel (minimum 400w suggested for all year round U.K. use. 200w minimum for U.K. summer and all year round southern Europe use) and it’s not as fast charging as the latest models (4 hours with AC) but if I was in the market for more power for my motorhome or camper and didn’t want a workshop bespoke job with a lithium conversion, and retain the use of original equipment 12v system whilst providing an additional power reservoir over and beyond this, then I would go for it.
But I am not in the market as I already have a set up. An older Bluetti model built like a battleship. Just frustrated that I could have got this for less money!
We charge ebike batteries, run the kettle and toaster and hair dryer, charge mobile devices, run the 12v TV and AC DVD player with ours. And occasional use as hook up. Use lpg for the fridge. Minimises use of lead acid leisure battery.
You have to make up your own mind about the best way of moving forward with additional power requirements. If you go off grid with e-bikes then what do you do?
Really just highlighting what the costs are of separates relative to this current Bluetti offer. Without the time and installation costs.
And it can be charged with a cheap generator daytime when noise is less of an issue so that you have a silent night time power reservoir. Just a charging option that Bluetti do mention.
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