If the Bluetti power box hasn’t got the means to connect to a Bluetti booster
battery, then only by using an
inverter connected to the lithium
battery and then plugging the Bluetti charging lead into this. A form of
battery to
battery charging.
You have pass through power so you can draw from the Bluetti whilst at the same time the lithium
battery is being used to charge the Bluetti unit. So you could potentially buy a lower cost smaller Bluetti unit, although having a smaller
inverter power rating, and buy a 200ah lithium
battery with its own separate
inverter, with a higher rating for use with equipment beyond the scope of the Bluetti
inverter maybe.
But why not them simply connect gear directly to the lithium
battery inverter being used?
The answer is you cannot see draw rates or
battery power levels or hours of use available or any of the data that the Bluetti screen offers so you are using equipment entirely blind.
There are lithium batteries that have apps so you can view how discharged they are so st least you know when the support
battery is fully discharged and you then are reliant solely on what’s left in the Bluetti unit. Maybe the apps do show all the information that the Bluetti display screen shows so you then would know the draw on the
battery that the Bluetti is making.
You can pick up 200ah lithium batteries from around £700. And then you need the
inverter. You also need a transformer to charge the lithium
battery.
So potentially you could have a 225ah Bluetti and lithium
battery set up for say £1200 (assuming
inverter and charger £100 each and £300 for the smallest Bluetti unit) plus the cost of
solar panels.
As against the £1600 for a 200ah Bluetti unit.
You can then of course connect any number of 200ah lithium batteries in parallel to further boost your capacity. As against £1400 for each Bluetti 200ah
battery expansion pack.