Thought your site had " dropped off the radar" as sites often have...just now catching this episode on Jan 2nd. I myself am looking at both a larger self contained solar/rechargable pwr supply (in addition to my house back up generator)...and a smaller unit for use at my cabin ( under construction). Nice timely/informative video. Thanks!
The problem with power stations is they all have a lithium battery which dies in cold weather. I've had several lithium batteries which power garden tools die when winter arrived at temperatures of 28 fareneit (-2 celsius). If kept in an insulated box, I wonder if that would prevent this issue?
So can it run an 83W, 50Hz, 240 volt, 1.0 Amp, 0.485kW h/24hr kitchen freezer? Even for at least 4hrs but then longer with the B80 expansion batteries?
Obviously a larger capacity system would be better purely for home use, but I’m looking at this AC60 (plus 200W solar panel) as a tent camping system, but also a minimal emergency power home backup with the B80’s to keep essentials running until power comes back on like a freezer to keep food safe and then briefly a low wattage kettle (300W) or a small microwave plus phones and AA or AAA battery charger etc
Hello: this unit puts out 120 volt AC. I'm guessing if you have a 240 volt AC unit you are in Europe? I'm not sure if Bluetti makes a 240 volt AC unit. The big thing to consider is starting wattage. When the freezer kicks on it needs a surge of power then the wattage kicks down to running wattage which you listed above. The Bluetti AC 60 supports 1200 watts of surge power but at 120V AC.
@@impermanenthuman8427 Here's a good blog on BLUETTI's website regarding running kitchen appliances: www.bluettipower.com/blogs/news/solar-generator-powering-kitchen-appliances
Thought your site had " dropped off the radar" as sites often have...just now catching this episode on Jan 2nd. I myself am looking at both a larger self contained solar/rechargable pwr supply (in addition to my house back up generator)...and a smaller unit for use at my cabin ( under construction). Nice timely/informative video. Thanks!
Very informative!
The problem with power stations is they all have a lithium battery which dies in cold weather. I've had several lithium batteries which power garden tools die when winter arrived at temperatures of 28 fareneit (-2 celsius). If kept in an insulated box, I wonder if that would prevent this issue?
So can it run an 83W, 50Hz, 240 volt, 1.0 Amp, 0.485kW h/24hr kitchen freezer? Even for at least 4hrs but then longer with the B80 expansion batteries?
Obviously a larger capacity system would be better purely for home use, but I’m looking at this AC60 (plus 200W solar panel) as a tent camping system, but also a minimal emergency power home backup with the B80’s to keep essentials running until power comes back on like a freezer to keep food safe and then briefly a low wattage kettle (300W) or a small microwave plus phones and AA or AAA battery charger etc
Hello: this unit puts out 120 volt AC. I'm guessing if you have a 240 volt AC unit you are in Europe? I'm not sure if Bluetti makes a 240 volt AC unit. The big thing to consider is starting wattage. When the freezer kicks on it needs a surge of power then the wattage kicks down to running wattage which you listed above. The Bluetti AC 60 supports 1200 watts of surge power but at 120V AC.
@@impermanenthuman8427 Here's a good blog on BLUETTI's website regarding running kitchen appliances: www.bluettipower.com/blogs/news/solar-generator-powering-kitchen-appliances
@@HemlockRidgeUSA thanks
Not to be rude by why is the intro so long?
(Also you said Bluetti started the expansion battery thing but Ecoflow did that first.)