Free Shipping order over $59

Portable Power Station

Brand:
(100 customer reviews)
12 people are viewing this product right now

$249.00

Shipping calculated at checkout.
or
Estimated delivery:3 days
SKU: ZH267 Categories:
Pay safely with Visa Pay safely with Master Card Pay safely with PayPal Pay safely with Maestro Tooltip text
Guarantee Safe and Secure Payment Checkout

100 reviews for Portable Power Station

Customer Images

Image #1 from NiceShine buyer
Image #1 from David Benson
Image #1 from Curly
Image #2 from Curly
Image #1 from Jolene Schmitz
Image #2 from Jolene Schmitz
Image #3 from Jolene Schmitz
Image #1 from Michael
Image #2 from Michael
Image #3 from Michael
Image #1 from NiceShine buyer

NiceShine buyer

After 1yr it stopped charging

(0) (0)
Image #1 from David Benson

David Benson

I have a booth at a Farmer’s Market, this is the 21st year my wife and I have been doing this. When we first startedI kept track of our sales in a notebook.For the past several years, I have used a laptop to record our sales, and now I use an iPad. With both, I had a problem keeping the laptop and then the iPad charged.Our Farmer’s Market lasts for four hours on Saturdays, and I use the E300 to power my iPad, a Square card reader, a video camera, and calculator.Instead of worrying about loss of power, at the end of the Market Day, my Jackery E300 still has 84 to 87% of power left.Buying the E300 solved that problem so well, I bought another E300 in case of a power outage at home.

(0) (0)
Image #1 from Curly

Curly

Love it. Nice little unit, a very convenient size. I have an 1100Wh BLUETTI. It is not a pure sign wave inverter & it's very heavy. This little Jackery is light weight, has a pure sign wave, & very quiet electrically with my ham radio. It can be charged several ways. Comes with a wall charger & a car charger. It charged from 44% to 100% in less than a couple hours. I can plug in my 100Ah lithium grab n go battery to extend the Jackery. Thanks for the discounted price!

(0) (0)
Image #2 from Curly

Curly

Love it. Nice little unit, a very convenient size. I have an 1100Wh BLUETTI. It is not a pure sign wave inverter & it's very heavy. This little Jackery is light weight, has a pure sign wave, & very quiet electrically with my ham radio. It can be charged several ways. Comes with a wall charger & a car charger. It charged from 44% to 100% in less than a couple hours. I can plug in my 100Ah lithium grab n go battery to extend the Jackery. Thanks for the discounted price!

(0) (0)
Image #1 from Jolene Schmitz

Jolene Schmitz

This is a great size power pack. It's compact and convenient. It will power my light, my DC cooler, and my tv all at one time with energy to spare. PLUS it is so cute!Plan to buy a second one.

(0) (0)
Image #2 from Jolene Schmitz

Jolene Schmitz

This is a great size power pack. It's compact and convenient. It will power my light, my DC cooler, and my tv all at one time with energy to spare. PLUS it is so cute!Plan to buy a second one.

(0) (0)
Image #3 from Jolene Schmitz

Jolene Schmitz

This is a great size power pack. It's compact and convenient. It will power my light, my DC cooler, and my tv all at one time with energy to spare. PLUS it is so cute!Plan to buy a second one.

(0) (0)
Image #1 from Michael

Michael

Teh USB stuff was simple, it had not trouble running anything. Then I hooked up a 20 inch box fan running on high pulling 44 watts and it ran for over 4 hours. The shadow target helped but as you can see the panel wasn't positioned perfect. With the sun overhead I just laid the panel in the sun and it was charging at 88 watts. When plugged into 110 the unit only chargs at 78 watts. The 12 watt draw you see is from a vehicle fan plugged in the 12 volt outlet running on high.The props on the back of the pamels may be OK but I can see them wearing out over time. The magnets used to close the panels are great. The LCD display is exactly whats neede as well so there's no question as to what is going on.Taking this camping on an island with plenty of sun is going to be great.One thing to note; when you are charging, either with 110 or the solar panel, somewhere after it reaches 90% the input watts will start dropping. When the charge reaches 100% the input watts will be 0. Keep that in mind if you're using the input watts display to position the panels. When I first hooked up the panel the battery was 98% charged and it only registered 20 watts input making me think it wasn't working.

(0) (0)
Image #2 from Michael

Michael

Teh USB stuff was simple, it had not trouble running anything. Then I hooked up a 20 inch box fan running on high pulling 44 watts and it ran for over 4 hours. The shadow target helped but as you can see the panel wasn't positioned perfect. With the sun overhead I just laid the panel in the sun and it was charging at 88 watts. When plugged into 110 the unit only chargs at 78 watts. The 12 watt draw you see is from a vehicle fan plugged in the 12 volt outlet running on high.The props on the back of the pamels may be OK but I can see them wearing out over time. The magnets used to close the panels are great. The LCD display is exactly whats neede as well so there's no question as to what is going on.Taking this camping on an island with plenty of sun is going to be great.One thing to note; when you are charging, either with 110 or the solar panel, somewhere after it reaches 90% the input watts will start dropping. When the charge reaches 100% the input watts will be 0. Keep that in mind if you're using the input watts display to position the panels. When I first hooked up the panel the battery was 98% charged and it only registered 20 watts input making me think it wasn't working.

(0) (0)
Image #3 from Michael

Michael

Teh USB stuff was simple, it had not trouble running anything. Then I hooked up a 20 inch box fan running on high pulling 44 watts and it ran for over 4 hours. The shadow target helped but as you can see the panel wasn't positioned perfect. With the sun overhead I just laid the panel in the sun and it was charging at 88 watts. When plugged into 110 the unit only chargs at 78 watts. The 12 watt draw you see is from a vehicle fan plugged in the 12 volt outlet running on high.The props on the back of the pamels may be OK but I can see them wearing out over time. The magnets used to close the panels are great. The LCD display is exactly whats neede as well so there's no question as to what is going on.Taking this camping on an island with plenty of sun is going to be great.One thing to note; when you are charging, either with 110 or the solar panel, somewhere after it reaches 90% the input watts will start dropping. When the charge reaches 100% the input watts will be 0. Keep that in mind if you're using the input watts display to position the panels. When I first hooked up the panel the battery was 98% charged and it only registered 20 watts input making me think it wasn't working.

(0) (0)
Image #1 from NiceShine buyer
Image #1 from David Benson
Image #1 from Curly
Image #2 from Curly
Image #1 from Jolene Schmitz
Image #2 from Jolene Schmitz
Image #3 from Jolene Schmitz
Image #1 from Michael
Image #2 from Michael
Image #3 from Michael
4.7 Rating
1-5 of 100 reviews
  1. Ran CPAP for 7 hours but was at 1% charge when I woke up. This did what I needed it to do. I was hoping there’d be more charge in the morning though.

    (0) (0)
  2. After 1yr it stopped charging

    Image #1 from NiceShine buyer
    (0) (0)
  3. It has been a week and I still have not got the generator part yet…. Very worried 😧

    (0) (0)
  4. It’s super cute in size! I love that I can take this camping

    (0) (0)
  5. This thing is amazing. Best 259 usd I have ever spend. I think I’m gonna get the Jackery 1000 soon.

    (0) (0)
Add a review
Portable Power Station Portable Power Station
Rating*
0/5
* Rating is required
Your review
* Review is required
Name
* Name is required
Add photos or video to your review
* Please tick the checkbox to proceed
Portable Power Station

$249.00

You may add any content here from XStore Control Panel->Sales booster->Request a quote->Ask a question notification

At sem a enim eu vulputate nullam convallis Iaculis vitae odio faucibus adipiscing urna.

Ask an expert