@@jeff-millieesterline4209 the grading system only requires 100w USBc power delivery so it didn't lose points for this 'bug'. The 12v DC output still is limited below 150w so it doesn't gain a point there. Great question!
@@Jasonoid Thank you... I was hoping the update fixed some of the other DC issues, as I just ordered one for $1399. Thank you very much for the great job you do. I also loved the video using the server rack battery as that was something you and I talked about several months ago. Great job!
Thank you for your review,as a scientist (physics) I like detailed numbers. Your grading chart is very good for what it covers which is more than I can find in most places. The shortfall I notice in all reviews I have seen is the expandable battery cost/weight issue. I have found it is less expensive and more efficient to get 2 basic units rather than 1 additional battery. The 2 basic units can be used in 2 places at once,cost less.and gives redundant backup in the control system i.e. if i basic unit breaks down or is somewhere else I still have access to the full capabilities of 1 base unit while the other is being replaced or returned. The b230 costs $1000-$1200 (U.S.) so for $299 more I can have a backup to my backup, use one while recharging the other, or use in 2 separate locations.
Jason points this out in the video, just not all at one timestamp. Although the AC200L supports up to 20 Amps AC input, the supplied cable is the US standard 15 Amp plug (NEMA 5-15P). To prevent you pulling 20A through a 15A plug (and possibly 15A household wiring) and creating a fire hazard, the AC200L is capped to 12A AC input in firmware. To achieve the 20A AC input, you must purchase a cable that supports more than 15 Amps, verify your household wiring (I assume), talk to Bluetti support, and enter the support given secret password. At that point, you can set the Max AC amps the Bluetti will pull. As an aside, there is a YTer who has been advocating that US plugs should contain a fuse, as UK plugs are required to have - or as we see on Christmas lights or with Lasko fans. This is a perfect use case! In the event someone attempts to pull 20A through a 15A plug connected to a 20Amp household circuit, the plug fuse would blow before the cable could heat and potentially cause a fire (the 20A household breaker / household wiring would be fine and not trip.) Yes, fuses are an annoyance - but they can be an important safety mechanism.
I can't believe that America is still using half the volts but doubling the current, that's just more dangerous - and now they won't give you cables rated to run at the peak design because they'll create a risk 😂. Just adopt 230-240v @ 10 amps max and your 15A cable will work fine without fire risk or getting the electricals verified. lol for such an advanced country, so far behind in electrical standards
@@joebloggs6131 in america 110 volt will throw you off of it and out 220 will hold on to you and fry yer ass.. .. we just aint figured out the safety part over here.. by the way what do you use 48 volt dc power for.....
Another detailed review, THANK YOU Jason. Now my comments: I was looking at this for the last 2 weeks and just about ordered one, but as I have 2 of the AC180s and @ $670 ($1350 for 2) they provide over 2300Wh combined, 1800 Watts of AC each, 4 outlets each, 35 lbs. each and each have a Wireless charging pad and I can locate each one in a separate location, i.e. 2 different refrigerators/freezers. The AC200L provides a higher AC inverter wattage, and I really like the PV input ranges as 145 volts/15 amp/1200 watts, is very doable (would prefer 20 amp, but 😎) . I also agree with other commenters regarding the cables, proprietary cables are costly and hard to find. I like the standard PC cable for AC, XT60 or Anderson for PV. You can find or make them up easily and inexpensive. I also do not like the upgraded AC cable, at an additional charge, to accomplish what they advertise as maximum charging wattage. They should include it instead of the smaller cable. Another issue is requiring a password, from Bluetti, to achieve the highest charge setting. I believe that is Bluetti's way to document fast charging in case of any warranty issues. Need to read the fine print on the warranty. All in all, I will pass on this one and be happy with my Bluetti collection, as is.
I'd pick the AC200L just for the built in AC wall charger. Also while the 48V output is an interesting pick, I definitely see the benefit with this setup, as with a high voltage comes less energy loss in the cable, and 48V also means you can directly power a Starlink dish with no converter.
in 2023 I bought the AC200 MAX for car camping and possible extened home power outages. In camp I charge it with an Off Grid TREK 220 watt solar blanket WHILE running hate smaller ICECO cooler/freezer all day. On returning to camp I find the AC200 MAX fully charged and the cooler temperature at 34 F. as I had set it. Then I charge my 2 battery, 2 wheel drive E-CELLS mountain bike for the next day's hunt or exploration. So yep, it all works just fine. Ain't high tech great?!
I was just looking through the manual online and page 30 says that the depth of discharge is 95% for this model and the inverter is claimed to be 93% efficient. Also, the self-consumption of the unit is approximately 12watts. So, it looks like Bluetti is fine tuning efficiency for getting more of the available watt hours to the load. Your 89% efficiency seems to verify that. Thanks for doing your testing. Good review. Been watching your reviews all along but this time I subscribed.
I just purchased a BLUETTI AC200L unit and was delighted to find your more in depth review with actual detailed measurement data and thoughtfully critical review. It is also nice to know Solar takes priority over wall power for charging. The only feature missing that I'd like to have in this mid-size unit is a “Grid Tie” option. Basically, if you have a kilowatt of solar on the roof and the battery is full, why let all the excess power go to waste? Put it back into your house, or if you're generating enough, let the neighbors have it through your grid connection and run your meter backward at the same time. Or get yourself a Rivian truck and use the 30A outlet to charge the truck through the AC200L off solar, supplemented with grid power at night. The AC200L might be a little light weight for this at 2.4KW, but it should be possible, which might also be nice if you're camping with an EV/RV. I bought the AC200L unit because I keep blowing a housebreaker when I run an electric chipper. The AC200L has 20A outlets and I have 3x 275W solar panels I'm not using which can supplement AC input. I'll try this solution to see how it works.
Thanks for your time reviewing the AC200L. I have the AC180 but thinking of getting the AC200L because of almost double the watt hours. The solar input of 1,200w at 145v is higher than the AC180. So I can plug my 1,200watt solar array I use for the AC300 into the AC200L if needed and not worry that it is to much power input. Our power grid provider is getting worse keeping city power up. Just last weekend we lost power for 2.5 hours. At 4 hours you start to lose food in the refrigerator. And as you mentioned food is now so expensive. So the AC200L maybe dedicated to the frig.
Finally a reviewer that knows what he is talking about!!! I was waiting for a real review to decide between the Mega 2 and the L. Nobody at BLUETTI has given me a straight answer about the 48v plug. I’m connecting the device to my RV and want reliable high amp 12v dc. The L has a plug with a 48v output to a d40 box that hasn’t been released yet and the mega 2 has a dedicated 30a Anderson 12v. What is your opinion between the two?
I always evaluate based on what exists. Until the 48V solution is available, there is no high power DC form this product. I used Anderson Power Poles in DC distribution systems for years and consider them a solid solution.
@@rcguymikeOf course, but that is another item that is needed for the purpose, and that needs to be accounted for. Their own device is clearly going to be something of the kind. There is even an advantage here. It is possile you can get an external DC-DC converter that is more efficent than the built on one on a competitor, or the soon-to-be available OEM device.
If that 48v connector lets you interface with more rack batteries that'd be ideal, but I can see Bluetti allowing you to do that. Same if it let you discharge to grid via another inverter.
Very thorough review, you have a deep understanding of these devices. Answered a lot of questions I had about the new unit. I have the AC200 Max and was looking to get an additional unit.
Inverter Noise Measurements: AC200L 1425mv | AC200MAX 1650mv -|- However, your spreadsheet indicates AC200L as having inverter noise and "none" for the AC200MAX. Can you explain how this could be?
I love that they keep improving, but at this point, the updates have been so incremental that I’d be worried to even buy one for fear that a newer version with one key upgrade would be released shortly after.
Have the Max 200 and one battery with four 200 watt panels. Also the Bluetti EB2400. Problem with the Max 200 uses way too much energy with nothing attached where the Eb2400 on four 100 panels is a great work horse on these cloudy rainy days. Totally off grid, so keeping the low amp refrigerator running if the priority. Since already invested with the Max extra battery this new model L, might be the improvement...
Very compelling for 1500. I'd like to use it full time to power my office (about 600 to 1000w of computers and stuff). Love your 1000w renolgy portable array.
Finally, they made a station with backwards compatibility, the past year it seemed like all they wanted to do was make new batteries for their new power stations.
Hi, Could you elaborate on what the magic box is or step down in relation to the 48v output please? Trying to figure out how to use the ac200L to power my 12v rv system as well. Thanks in advance
Fantastic review @Jasonoid -- Probably the best one I've seen on this product. Thank you for the discount code, I hope you get credit with Bluetti for the purchase. 😃Looking forward to your next video. 🎉
To test the sign wave, connect non linear load of at least 1500watt and monitor the wave. Batter even is to measure the THD. Seeing the shape of the wave tell a little about the quality of the power.
Appreciate the added oscilloscope testing/info gathering!! The refrig test as always is appreciated. I think this one ran multiple hrs longer than similar watt-hour units you've tested and still was at 7% when you stopped the test. Great result. 👍 My theory is the "idle efficiency" impact shows up in this kind of testing since the refrig has "no load" b/w cycling, and this is a substantial part of the time. (And, yea, the AC converter efficiency I'm sure is a piece too.) Just fyi encase it is kind of "hidden" in your testing, the drawdown curve to 0% isn't always linear with no load change. My Delta 2 Max goes down much faster at the roughly 10%-0% range then 100%-10%. Something like twice or three times as fast under the same loading. (Not worth an RMA though. My River 2 Pro doesn't have this issue. Hopefully overtime firmware upgrades will reduce/eliminate this problem.) I'm not asking for any changes in your testing. Just an fyi since your testing is top tier! Thank you!!
It seems all brands program their screen percentages a little differently. I wish I had access to the inside of the battery so I could check the exact power flowing through the wires from the inverter to the battery at idle. Thanks for watching and providing your feedback!
I bought my MAX for running the power needs in my van. Them doing away with the 12V 30A is a huge bummer as that was one of the best features that most of the other brands lack.
Just ordered the AC200L with the Black Friday Bluetti discount and I was also able to use your $100 discount code. Great price. I currently have a AC200P that I plan to replace (but still keep) with the AC200L. Looking forward to having the larger inverter, faster DC and AC recharge times, and wifi/bluetooth. I currently have the AC200P hooked up to a 6 circuit manual transfer switch and with this I use the sogen to power the kitchen refrigerator, lights, a few outlets, and furnace blower motor for as long as solar input and battery keep things running each day. On days there are severe storms forcasted, I keep the unit charged but turned off as a backup in case of power loss. Oh yeah, the 12V - 145V solar input is a bonus so I can charge this thing with my 2 x 12.8V 100Ah Power Queen batteries (24V in series) and skip using the boost converter I needed with the 200P.
Excellent review. Having only a single usable 100W USB-C port wouldn't bother me (there are workarounds, like using 12VDC and/or 120VAC adapters), but what REALLY bothers me is the proprietary charging cables, especially the AC cable. Why not a standard computer-type AC cable? It's something to lose, forget, or wear out, just when you need it. /TILT/, sorry, for me that's going to be a dealbreaker, before even getting to the similar issue with the DC cable. If they're going to convert to a XT90, why not just start with that plug? The charging speed (and options) and AC output on this one look great, but it won't make my short list.
The standard IEC C13/C14 computer charging cable can only safely push 15A in the US or 1800W. To reach the max charge speed of 2400W which is 120V @ 20A they had to use a different receptacle. This is also why the larger AC300 and AC500 stations which support up to 3000W and 5000W of AC input power respectively can't use standard computer power cables and connectors. The smaller AC180 uses a standard IEC computer charging cable to support the station's 1440W max AC charging speed at 12A.
I’m glad to see that 12A is default, as that is the 80% of a 15a residential circuit or code compliant. That way the average consumer who doesn’t understand electricity will not burn their house down by placing a 15A load on a 12A circuit.
Mega kudos for EMI testing! More testers need to pay attention to this important test. Typically, the inverters are not the noise EMI/RFI noise generation problem source. The DC charging is. Have you performed any RFI/EMI noise tests at HF (1.8MHz to 30MHz) and VHF (130MHz to 440MHz) while charging from DC? If this is an MPPT charger, those of us wanting to use this as power for radio communications over HF and VHF need to know this. Many MPPT chargers are not FCC compliant and render receivers nearly useless.
@@Jasonoid It is not the output that is typically the issue. It is the DC charging side. The MPPT chargers these units are using are horrific. Test the noise (EMI/RFI) at HF and VHF frequencies (1.8MHz - 450MHz) while the MPPT is getting full solar power. Way above audio and AM frequencies.
@@SLCompulsion way above my radio knowledge 😮 I didn't test that specifically on this model (or any other model). It seems someone who is familiar with all that needs to test these power stations specifically.
Yes, I have the AC 200 L power station I hooked up my 55 W dual refrigerator freezer and the next day I had 30% charge left. My trailer does not have air conditioning with the heat in the trailer cause it to drop sufficiently.?
I don't think that's heat, that's probably the background idle power usage of the inverter. Any other loads connected with the fridge? If the fridge is a DC fridge, you'll get WAY longer runtimes off the DC output.
Any positive /negative comments on Bluetti customer service - this is a big purchase and I would really be disappointed if they don't provide good support.
They revamped their customer support in the beginning of 2023. It's definitely improved over the last year. I have had much less negative comments on my Bluetti videos. You could always call them over the phone and test it out.
Hey @jasonoid, bluetti has put out a firmware update for the usbc ports that fixes* the problem you mentioned. You are able to pull more watts from the ports. Its not 200w total, but it looks like you're able to pull up to 150-180w now.
Excellent presentation. Thank you. Really disappointed with the DC 12/48v output options. It will be interesting to see what kind of gizmo they come up with for the 48v output and how much that costs. Not really thrilled with the USB ports as you discuss. All of the newest Bluetti’s seem to for home use at 120v-AC and not for folks with trucks/vans/camping. Pecron and Oupes both are doing a far better job for the truck/van/vamping crowd.
Yes, the cost of the D40 that will take the output of the 48 volt at 8 amps socket will be a key factor. But 48 volts at 8 amps is 384 watts. 384 watts at 12 volts is 32 amps. So, depending on the efficiency of the D40 conversion down to 12 volts, it probably will still give you the 30 amps(maybe even a little more) that the MAX provides.
Hi Jason. In your opinion, will the new 48 volt output allow for daisy chaining my old 200 max into the new 200 L ? this would essentially turn the old 200 Max into an expansion battery. If this is the case, I would buy the new 200L instead of an B230 battery.
The AC200L has the 48v output, which you could use to charge your AC200Max (since the power is coming out of the AC200L). I think that would be an efficient 'Expansion battery' option.
Can you draw power from the 4 wall outlets, and from the 1 30amp outlet a the same time? I'd like to use it as a UPS for my TV/receiver, and then in case of outages... plug the house-inlet to the 30amp outlet... while leaving the TV/receiver plugged into the regular outlets.
Agree. I don't know who they're marketing to with a 48V output? And to use it in a van life scenario, they want you to buy another component?? That kind of defeats the 'all in one' concept. 🤷♂️
Great in-depth review Jason. I like it better for sure over the ac200max but yea the usbc at 140? I tested the same and was wondering what was going on lol.
That is a very high reading for Dirty Electricity. We have success with pairs of Greenwave Plug-in filters to bring that DE figure way down to 40mV, which is considered low noise. Also, way better for a person's health living in their RV...
I would like to see a select-able auxiliary output; 12v 30A, OR, 48v. That shouldn't be hard to do. Note that the new Zero Breeze is running at 48VDC,... much more efficient. Also, it would help to also see the Wh that the fridge uses. This can vary greatly between fridges, and might be more useful to folks. Great timing on this review...Black Friday!
Great idea with the swappable voltage output. That would be awesome for a power station to have both 12v and 48v available (even better if they were available at the same time). I have always wondered why these don't just have a port available for the direct battery output.
The AC200L runs at 51.2V, the plug voltage seems to be 51.2 until the last minutes of life where it goes down to 48v. But the plug is protected by a data pin, which makes it useless. So Bluetti must sell a cable that activate the current and send it to anderson plug. Then maybe hopefully we can plug a converter 48v8a to 12v30. But the D40 module they talk won’t help. It can only charge a battery. The only possibility is the anderson cable and buying a converter on Amazon. A bluetti tech comfirmed the d40 cannot convert to 12v30a to plug directly on a fuse box. It seems to be a regulator that combine multiple source of energy, stabilize it for clean battery charging. I don’t the difference at the end. It should be 12v for the battery. So why it cannot be use directly to a 12v fuse box source? Maybe a specialist can give us some explanation..
Question: if you attach one of the additional batteries, what are both the charge, and discharge orders? If you have both an AC200L, and a 2nd battery plugged together, will they both charge off of one source, say a 350 watt portable solar panel? Will one battery charge first, then roll-over to the next? How does it work, or do you need to charge both separately?
Bluetti units seem to discharge and charge at the same time, it balances the power load between the two. The same is the case if you have multiple batteries connected.
@@Jasonoid - so, to confirm: if I have both an AC200L & battery connected together, they are treated as "One" unit for both charge, and discharge? Thanks for the response.
Does it make sense to define how much power required to charge station and use them for comparison? I've found it's required to spend much more power than expected. For instance Ecoflow Delta 2 Max was charged with 2.6 kWh(AC) at 200W speed in my case. I would emphesize there is a problem with station so could be irrelevant for Delta 2 Max series.
@Jasonoid found that charging lost was even more than discharging. If summarize discharging/charging lost it would be quite huge value. ~800-900 wh per 2kWh. So for me it's quite interesting to know how different brands deal with it. I hope Bluetti is more effective here, but who knows... Is it a good idea to include such statistics in future comparisons?
Customer service is in the tank again. Tried several days and no one was available. Currently emailing with customer service because my AC200L will not charge through my Honda EU2000i inverter generator and they are currently working on the firmware. My suspicion is someone disabled or limited the AC charging and without it, this power station is worthless in an emergency situation with storms or loudspeakers and the grid down. I hope Bluetti can get their act together or their sales will go down when people find out their limitations.
I don't have a HAM radio to test with, I did test with the small handheld AM radio though. If the radio is a couple feet away from the power station you shouldnt hear the noise.
Jason I can always count on you for an excellent honest review 👍 Bluetti still hasn’t won me over with anything yet PS I have yet to see the join button 🤷🏼♀️
Lots of upgrades. Especially the AC charge option. The missing 12V 30A. Now makes is unusable for RV setups. Do note, you can't shut the units off when PV is putting power in. You need to disconnect it first. Not sure why that is?
great review. One thing I was wondering is with the 200 max if you just leave it plugged in to the AC brick to charge the fan will run 24/7 until you unplug the brick. Now that there is no longer a brick, will the fans in the fans stop running once the unit is charged to 100%?
The fans hardly run on the new model, they only run while needed. Much improved over the AC200max. Most of the time you won't hear them. They are very quiet. I've noticed they run mostly if you fast charge or if you have a large load on the inverter.
I wish we could talk more about the use of the server rack battery! That's something I'm considering right now is to buy the AC 200l and get a server rack battery. Is that a good way to go? Would you charge the server rack battery with a separate solar charger or just use the unit?
I have a full video about using batteries to charge power stations HERE: ua-cam.com/video/tK4JKmfndh8/v-deo.html I go through using a 48v battery in the video. It's a great option to extend runtime.
Good Morning .really enjoyed the info on this unit , having an issue and can't get an answer from Bluetti . on pass through charging I am using 800 watts going to an ac unit and have it plugged into a 2000 watt inverter for charging set on silent mode (so should be limited to 800 input ) but it is piling 1400 watts . so the question is does the pass through charging add the two togather so it is pulling 1400 watts even through it should be limited to 800 watts . Keeps popping my breaker .
When charging off AC, it will both charge the battery AND power the loads that are connected into the power station. You'll need to use the smart app to manually adjust the charging amperage to the exact point that it doesn't pop your breaker.
I have an AC200Max. My only complaint is the weight. I may be moving into an RV next year so I may go for a AC 180 for the RV since its easier to carry. I am hoping they can reduce the weight on the batteries. I just got the BougeRV CIGS Panels. Two, 200 watt panels. I just tested the first panel. Its great. I will set up the next panel this weekend. Then I will hook both panels up and test them out.
on the driveway lying flat, In the afternoon sun, panel not in prime position. I was getting 101 watts@@Jasonoid I need to watch a video on how to hook up the second CIGS panel. Then I will hook up the Bluetti PV 350. Not sure how to hook up all three? It may make a good video for you.
Just got the Second CIGS Panel hooked up in Series. Works great, on a cloudy/sunny day with panels in a bad position in the driveway, lying flat. I am pulling in 172 watts. Fluctuating with passing clouds and low, winter afternoon sun.@@Jasonoid
I'd love to see you cover charging directly from the alternator in a vehicle like Goal Zero Yeti.. at extra expense of a module. How can this be done with the Bluetti? I've seen folks chat about a Victron DC-DC charger.. others say no no.. Use a DC-DC converter. Help?
Can i use the DC output to power my van build? Bluetti doesn't have the D40 voltage regulator yet. Is there another aftermarket voltage regulator that can be used?
Bluetti just annnouced the AC240, it has the 30 amp 12v output that would work well for your Van Build. I'd also suggest taking a look at the UGREEN 2200, excellent performance with a 30 amp output: ua-cam.com/video/Gxa6aUkebcc/v-deo.html
I got the 200Max based on your earlier review. I’m happy with it generally except for that damn charging brick and slow charge rate. The unit they sent you had a silent brick. The one I got had the noisy fan which is on ALL the time it’s plugged in. So this one looked perfect until you got to the DC. They dump the 30amp plug which is what I use 80% of the time and stick you with a cigarette plug and 10 amps?? It’s 2023, when will they get rid of that ancient technology? They have adapter plugs for everything else imaginable!
I was pretty let down when I saw the new specs. The AC200MAX was the bomb, with these simple upgrades and keeping the 30amp output would have been amazing.... Not a fan of the newer change away from high DC output.
'MERICA... 🇺🇸 Unfortunately those are the electrical standards in your country as opposed to other continents that run twice the voltage but half the current to achieve those same watts. If you got with the program, Bluetti could make you a better unit (2x AC outputs at twice the power, rather than the 4x AC outputs at half the power, each). I just got an AC180 here in Australia, and it's an awesome unit, perhaps the AC200L in the Aussie standards will be the unit that all you Americans want but as yet can't attain.
@@Jasonoid Can own guns here too, just need to get a weapons licence that means you know how to safely store the weapon, and keep ammunition separately. Really reduces the risk of getting shot in 5th Grade Math Class
Great review which I will share with my group. I'm wondering if there is a weakness here though when connecting an expansion battery. I want to buy this unit (as an upgrade from the AC200P) and I would like to connect my existing B230 battery to get me through the night. If the D050S charge enhancer is used to connect the B230 to the solar panels and then the B230 is connected to the AC200L via aviation cable to the Solar input on the AC200L, the B230 can still run out of power at night and sleep/die and will not be "woken up" by the AC200L if it still has some power. I dont think it can sense available power from the panels that could wake up and refill the B230. Am I wrong? Can you use the AC200L to automatically wake up the B230 so that it can start charging from the panels again ? I am looking for something that can run automatically and perpetually as long as weather cooperates. I could buy (2) B300 batteries but thats a lot of cheddar. I also have a third party 200ah LifePo4 battery but not sure if I can get that into the equation to keep the B230 awake.
@Jasnoid if you set the ac200l in standard mode and reduce the max available current off grid to 2-4 amps, how many watts come into the power station. Also, do you have concerns that Bluetti uses non-standard cables for charging? I searched on Amazon for aviation connectors and found limited resources.
Yes, unfortunately it does use proprietary charging cables. Bluetti has always done that on their 2000wh devices (for solar and AC input). How are you going to limit the power from the wall? I am not aware of a way to do that through the circuitry in my house. The current limiting (custom charging speed) is a process of the power station charging board. I believe setting the custom charging speed will be the only way to do that. I walked through that in while going over the Bluetti smart app.
I know this is 3 months old, wondering if you ever encountered circuit breaker trip when to try to charge from home current. I had charged my unit to full capacity at home and ran some tests, got it down to about 37% charge and decided to charge it up. Now it trips 15amp circuit every time with nothing else on it when plugged into my RV which is plugged into 50amp shore power. Kind of lost now, cannot get it charged back up.
@@Jasonoid Jason it was set to standard. I just got setup at a new camping site and will review it again and try and plug directly into the campsite 110 outlet first. Thank you very much for responding!
I only have one B300. The three B300s batteries I have are not compatible with this model, they only work with the AC500. The expansion cable is too large to connect, unfortunately.
@4:34 did the device have ECO-AC feature? Was it disabled for this no load test? My AC70 has a Eco AC &DC feature where it shuts off output if the load hasn't been more than a set value for a set time.
142W on the 12V 142W total on the USBC outputs Rather coincidental. I wonder if it's 142W total across all the 12V and 5V DC outputs, or if they are just using the same buck circuit for each.
I tested both at the same time, I got around 250w from both... But yes... That's why I thought it was a firmware issue, and just needed to be 'reprogrammed'... I guess it wasnt that 'simple' haha
After reviewing your fantastic video, I happened to notice not once did you mention a word about the RV 30amp cord!! If bluetti has deleted that popular option in my opinion, that would be a grave mistake on bluetti's part. Im in the market to power my RV with that RV 30 amp cord. I guess I'll my money $$$ with another company to meat my needs. Hello Delta pro!!
My last purchase was the Ac180. Thinking a out skipping 2000 series and going Ac300 or delta pro. Does each additional bluetti etti battery have a parasitic draw if multiple batteries are connected?
Am having difficult finding a unit that can support ham radio 20-25 amp dc voice transmit load. Any ideas which brands and models to look at ? (Would use Anderson power poles output connected to what ever radio plug)
I tested the Oupes Mega 3 last week that has a 30 amp DC output I also tested the Pecron E1500lfp that has a 30 amps DC output Both options should work well.... but I'm not sure how clean the output will be vs using a standalone 12v LFP battery like this: amzn.to/49Ke8FR
I just purchased with your code. I unfortunately had to return my Pecron E1500LFP. It was perfect but made all lights flicker to the point I couldn’t stand it. I suspect there was a problem with the AC inverter sine wave coming out. I’m really excited about the AC200L though.
@@JasonoidI was sending back videos using all kinds of different LEDs and it was always the same. I even bought a cheap oscilloscope to help diagnose, I was really set on trying to fix it. BLUETTI works for me because of the high solar input voltage. Everyone else maxes out at 60v whereas they go up to 145v. Last thing I want to do is remove the panels and wire them in parallel to drop the voltage.
AC1800 does 500w solar input and has an 1800w inverter. The AC200L has 1200w solar input and a 2400w inverter. You can power more things at the same time with the larger model, along with faster charging.
I prefer the 30A 12V DC output to this. Puzzling decision, which gets a pass from me in terms of buying this unit. I generally look for the best DC capability I can find, as it suits my RV and off-grid needs better than AC on the whole.
@@carlosbelaustegui3546 Ugreen 2200 has dual DC input ports. The Ecoflow delta 2 Max also has dual DC input ports. Both those units would work in your scenario. I have review on both.
@@JasonoidYes, I checked all your videos. Great btw ! There are two problems with the Ugreen 2200 : It doesn't support dual charging as in your spreadsheet and almost impossible to get here in Europe.
@@carlosbelaustegui3546 yep, it's hard to find the perfect power station. You pretty much have to settle on what works best with what's currently available.
Great review. The USB-C limit is likely a thermal problem that was missed and now they can’t fix it. The 48V output baffles me. Probably cost cutting as the internal bus is likely 48 V and this allowed them to remove the 48->12V 30A buck converter and make users pay for it separately with an overpriced box that includes $$ sunk into a special connector, cable and enclosure. Noisy AC and poor DC. This one’s a big miss.
I think you are spot on with the USBc limit and the move to a 48v output on cost savings. The price is a bit less than last generation. Thanks for your insight!
Great review Ja son. I ha be been waiting for this ever since I heard about this unit. It is definitely a winner. I think I like this better than the Delta 2 Max. Mainly because they do a better job with expansion batteries. I also don’t like a EcoFlow not including solar cables. Would love your opinion between this and the Delta 2 Max, or between the AC180 and the Delta 2.
The Delta 2 and AC180 are very similar, same with the AC200L and the Delta 2 Max. It's hard to chose one over the other unless I know the exact use case because they do have their advantages in certain areas haha
So I bought a delta 2 due to price even though I was leaning toward the ac180. We also got 3 ac180’s for work. Both great units. However I am now glad I got the delta 2. Their app is just more sophisticated than the Bluetti, it allows you to choose a specific charge rate and floor and ceiling. So unless you need the couple hundred extra wh, I would recommend the Delta 2 right now. I do prefer everything front facing on the ac180, and Bluetti theoretically could improve their app to be comparable. Like I said, both are great units and at the end of the day I would be happy with either, but right now I am glad I went with the Delta2.
@@davidcarrico3385 Thank you so much. This is very helpful. I currently own power stations from companies and agree with you. Seems lately, I have been seeing better deals on Bluetti units that EcoFlow, but maybe I am not looking very carefully. Another interesting thing is that each company usually has one feature the other does not have and I want, like the dual solar input on the Delta 2 max vs. the more capable expansion batteries on Bluetti. Thank you so much for your help.
@@litnoregrets7551 so true, my Delta 2 purchase was on prime day this summer when the ac180 was still 799. I wish the ac180 had managed expansion, as I would have waited and gotten that instead, as like you, I am very impressed with their expansion batteries. That’s one of the downsides of the delta2 expansion battery, it does nothing other than add capacity and they charge a higher premium than I think they should for that.
UPDATE: USBc Port Issue Has Been Fixed! Watch HERE: ua-cam.com/users/shortsMNMQJS5E4tA?feature=share
Jason ... Are the fixes good enough to improve the overall score in your spreadsheet?
@@jeff-millieesterline4209 the grading system only requires 100w USBc power delivery so it didn't lose points for this 'bug'. The 12v DC output still is limited below 150w so it doesn't gain a point there. Great question!
@@Jasonoid Thank you... I was hoping the update fixed some of the other DC issues, as I just ordered one for $1399. Thank you very much for the great job you do. I also loved the video using the server rack battery as that was something you and I talked about several months ago. Great job!
Your video helped convince me to buy one. Great job!
Can the charge enhancer be used with b230 while connected to the 200l charging with solar?
Your reviews are fantastic. Data and test driven and not overly long. I don't know why your channel isn't significantly more popular.
I've always joked that youtube doesn't like to recommend my content. Maybe one day my videos will get more popular 🤷 thanks for checking it out 😁👍
Thank you for your review,as a scientist (physics) I like detailed numbers. Your grading chart is very good for what it covers which is more than I can find in most places. The shortfall I notice in all reviews I have seen is the expandable battery cost/weight issue. I have found it is less expensive and more efficient to get 2 basic units rather than 1 additional battery. The 2 basic units can be used in 2 places at once,cost less.and gives redundant backup in the control system i.e. if i basic unit breaks down or is somewhere else I still have access to the full capabilities of 1 base unit while the other is being replaced or returned. The b230 costs $1000-$1200 (U.S.) so for $299 more I can have a backup to my backup, use one while recharging the other, or use in 2 separate locations.
This analysis is helpful
SAD to see the 30amp socket disappear. That was the main reason I went with my AC200Max
😔 That's the first thing I noticed when I opened up the box.
Darn that’s a dealbreaker for me 😔
What a bad decision they made with this. Other than that it's a nice unit but that is killer not having that.
Luckily I got the Max too. My camper runs off that 30A.
What is 30a and why do you need it?
Jason points this out in the video, just not all at one timestamp.
Although the AC200L supports up to 20 Amps AC input, the supplied cable is the US standard 15 Amp plug (NEMA 5-15P).
To prevent you pulling 20A through a 15A plug (and possibly 15A household wiring) and creating a fire hazard, the AC200L is capped to 12A AC input in firmware.
To achieve the 20A AC input, you must purchase a cable that supports more than 15 Amps, verify your household wiring (I assume), talk to Bluetti support, and enter the support given secret password. At that point, you can set the Max AC amps the Bluetti will pull.
As an aside, there is a YTer who has been advocating that US plugs should contain a fuse, as UK plugs are required to have - or as we see on Christmas lights or with Lasko fans.
This is a perfect use case! In the event someone attempts to pull 20A through a 15A plug connected to a 20Amp household circuit, the plug fuse would blow before the cable could heat and potentially cause a fire (the 20A household breaker / household wiring would be fine and not trip.) Yes, fuses are an annoyance - but they can be an important safety mechanism.
I can't believe that America is still using half the volts but doubling the current, that's just more dangerous - and now they won't give you cables rated to run at the peak design because they'll create a risk 😂. Just adopt 230-240v @ 10 amps max and your 15A cable will work fine without fire risk or getting the electricals verified. lol for such an advanced country, so far behind in electrical standards
@@joebloggs6131 in america 110 volt will throw you off of it and out 220 will hold on to you and fry yer ass.. .. we just aint figured out the safety part over here.. by the way what do you use 48 volt dc power for.....
@@joebloggs6131 Yet with 350 million people we have no more issues than the EU.
@@jacobpetersen5662TELL EM
Another detailed review, THANK YOU Jason.
Now my comments:
I was looking at this for the last 2 weeks and just about ordered one, but as I have 2 of the AC180s and @ $670 ($1350 for 2) they provide over 2300Wh combined, 1800 Watts of AC each, 4 outlets each, 35 lbs. each and each have a Wireless charging pad and I can locate each one in a separate location, i.e. 2 different refrigerators/freezers.
The AC200L provides a higher AC inverter wattage, and I really like the PV input ranges as 145 volts/15 amp/1200 watts, is very doable (would prefer 20 amp, but 😎) .
I also agree with other commenters regarding the cables, proprietary cables are costly and hard to find. I like the standard PC cable for AC, XT60 or Anderson for PV. You can find or make them up easily and inexpensive. I also do not like the upgraded AC cable, at an additional charge, to accomplish what they advertise as maximum charging wattage. They should include it instead of the smaller cable. Another issue is requiring a password, from Bluetti, to achieve the highest charge setting. I believe that is Bluetti's way to document fast charging in case of any warranty issues. Need to read the fine print on the warranty.
All in all, I will pass on this one and be happy with my Bluetti collection, as is.
Having two AC180's is a great setup! Thanks for sharing your thoughts :)
I'd pick the AC200L just for the built in AC wall charger.
Also while the 48V output is an interesting pick, I definitely see the benefit with this setup, as with a high voltage comes less energy loss in the cable, and 48V also means you can directly power a Starlink dish with no converter.
That would be one benefit, the ability to run a starlink directly :)
Without doubt…you do the best, in depth reviews of power stations 👌
Thank you! My goal is to leave no question unanswered. I don't think that's possible on a product with so many features though haha
in 2023 I bought the AC200 MAX for car camping and possible extened home power outages. In camp I charge it with an Off Grid TREK 220 watt solar blanket WHILE running hate smaller ICECO cooler/freezer all day. On returning to camp I find the AC200 MAX fully charged and the cooler temperature at 34 F. as I had set it. Then I charge my 2 battery, 2 wheel drive E-CELLS mountain bike for the next day's hunt or exploration. So yep, it all works just fine. Ain't high tech great?!
I was just looking through the manual online and page 30 says that the depth of discharge is 95% for this model and the inverter is claimed to be 93% efficient. Also, the self-consumption of the unit is approximately 12watts. So, it looks like Bluetti is fine tuning efficiency for getting more of the available watt hours to the load. Your 89% efficiency seems to verify that. Thanks for doing your testing. Good review. Been watching your reviews all along but this time I subscribed.
Welcome to the Jasonoid Crew! Haha
I just purchased a BLUETTI AC200L unit and was delighted to find your more in depth review with actual detailed measurement data and thoughtfully critical review. It is also nice to know Solar takes priority over wall power for charging.
The only feature missing that I'd like to have in this mid-size unit is a “Grid Tie” option. Basically, if you have a kilowatt of solar on the roof and the battery is full, why let all the excess power go to waste? Put it back into your house, or if you're generating enough, let the neighbors have it through your grid connection and run your meter backward at the same time.
Or get yourself a Rivian truck and use the 30A outlet to charge the truck through the AC200L off solar, supplemented with grid power at night. The AC200L might be a little light weight for this at 2.4KW, but it should be possible, which might also be nice if you're camping with an EV/RV.
I bought the AC200L unit because I keep blowing a housebreaker when I run an electric chipper. The AC200L has 20A outlets and I have 3x 275W solar panels I'm not using which can supplement AC input. I'll try this solution to see how it works.
Thanks for your time reviewing the AC200L. I have the AC180 but thinking of getting the AC200L because of almost double the watt hours. The solar input of 1,200w at 145v is higher than the AC180. So I can plug my 1,200watt solar array I use for the AC300 into the AC200L if needed and not worry that it is to much power input.
Our power grid provider is getting worse keeping city power up. Just last weekend we lost power for 2.5 hours. At 4 hours you start to lose food in the refrigerator. And as you mentioned food is now so expensive. So the AC200L maybe dedicated to the frig.
Thanks!
Thank you so much! Much appreciated!
Finally a reviewer that knows what he is talking about!!! I was waiting for a real review to decide between the Mega 2 and the L. Nobody at BLUETTI has given me a straight answer about the 48v plug. I’m connecting the device to my RV and want reliable high amp 12v dc. The L has a plug with a 48v output to a d40 box that hasn’t been released yet and the mega 2 has a dedicated 30a Anderson 12v. What is your opinion between the two?
I always evaluate based on what exists. Until the 48V solution is available, there is no high power DC form this product. I used Anderson Power Poles in DC distribution systems for years and consider them a solid solution.
@@YeOldeTravellerjust get a DC-DC converter...
@@rcguymikeOf course, but that is another item that is needed for the purpose, and that needs to be accounted for. Their own device is clearly going to be something of the kind.
There is even an advantage here. It is possile you can get an external DC-DC converter that is more efficent than the built on one on a competitor, or the soon-to-be available OEM device.
If that 48v connector lets you interface with more rack batteries that'd be ideal, but I can see Bluetti allowing you to do that. Same if it let you discharge to grid via another inverter.
Very thorough review, you have a deep understanding of these devices. Answered a lot of questions I had about the new unit. I have the AC200 Max and was looking to get an additional unit.
Glad you found the video helpful!
Thanks!
Thank you for the donation! Much appreciated 👍😊
Love how comprehensive your testing was.
One of the best reviews and testing of this product...💯👍
Thanks! Please spread the word! 😎👍
Inverter Noise Measurements: AC200L 1425mv | AC200MAX 1650mv -|- However, your spreadsheet indicates AC200L as having inverter noise and "none" for the AC200MAX. Can you explain how this could be?
I just bought two of the Anker 767’s! Great discount prices today!
Excellent review, thank you. Seems to be a nice update to the AC200 lineup. The increased solar capacity is what I like most.
I love the high DC input voltage of 145v and how you can get the full 1200 watts!
I love that they keep improving, but at this point, the updates have been so incremental that I’d be worried to even buy one for fear that a newer version with one key upgrade would be released shortly after.
That's definitely a common theme with tech devices. It's the same with laptops and iPhones each year.
Have the Max 200 and one battery with four 200 watt panels. Also the Bluetti EB2400. Problem with the Max 200 uses way too much energy with nothing attached where the Eb2400 on four 100 panels is a great work horse on these cloudy rainy days. Totally off grid, so keeping the low amp refrigerator running if the priority. Since already invested with the Max extra battery this new model L, might be the improvement...
Thanks, I just ordered AC200L and B210 battery during Prime Day October 2024.
Great pricing!
Very compelling for 1500. I'd like to use it full time to power my office (about 600 to 1000w of computers and stuff). Love your 1000w renolgy portable array.
I have really enjoyed the 1000w array. Good to see the panels are also holding up to full time usage as well!
On sale on Amazon right now
Finally, they made a station with backwards compatibility, the past year it seemed like all they wanted to do was make new batteries for their new power stations.
I was happy to see it supports the older gen batteries!
The 48V DC output is a head scratcher. Rather than buy the seperate Bluetti magic box, could you use a step-down to power a 12V system in a RV?
I don't see why that wouldn't work, I didn't have the cable to test. I'll have to try that out later on 😁
Hi, Could you elaborate on what the magic box is or step down in relation to the 48v output please? Trying to figure out how to use the ac200L to power my 12v rv system as well. Thanks in advance
Fantastic review @Jasonoid -- Probably the best one I've seen on this product. Thank you for the discount code, I hope you get credit with Bluetti for the purchase. 😃Looking forward to your next video. 🎉
Thank you for using my discount code! It should give me the credit.
To test the sign wave, connect non linear load of at least 1500watt and monitor the wave. Batter even is to measure the THD. Seeing the shape of the wave tell a little about the quality of the power.
Best reviews on YT. Love your videos.
Thank you!
@@Jasonoid I bought the AC180 thanks to your reviews and super happy with it.
Appreciate the added oscilloscope testing/info gathering!!
The refrig test as always is appreciated. I think this one ran multiple hrs longer than similar watt-hour units you've tested and still was at 7% when you stopped the test. Great result. 👍 My theory is the "idle efficiency" impact shows up in this kind of testing since the refrig has "no load" b/w cycling, and this is a substantial part of the time. (And, yea, the AC converter efficiency I'm sure is a piece too.)
Just fyi encase it is kind of "hidden" in your testing, the drawdown curve to 0% isn't always linear with no load change. My Delta 2 Max goes down much faster at the roughly 10%-0% range then 100%-10%. Something like twice or three times as fast under the same loading. (Not worth an RMA though. My River 2 Pro doesn't have this issue. Hopefully overtime firmware upgrades will reduce/eliminate this problem.)
I'm not asking for any changes in your testing. Just an fyi since your testing is top tier!
Thank you!!
It seems all brands program their screen percentages a little differently. I wish I had access to the inside of the battery so I could check the exact power flowing through the wires from the inverter to the battery at idle. Thanks for watching and providing your feedback!
Thanks for the review!
Great way to start a Friday!
That's why I like putting out my videos on a Friday! The weekend! 😀👍
I bought my MAX for running the power needs in my van. Them doing away with the 12V 30A is a huge bummer as that was one of the best features that most of the other brands lack.
Exactly!
Just ordered the AC200L with the Black Friday Bluetti discount and I was also able to use your $100 discount code. Great price. I currently have a AC200P that I plan to replace (but still keep) with the AC200L. Looking forward to having the larger inverter, faster DC and AC recharge times, and wifi/bluetooth. I currently have the AC200P hooked up to a 6 circuit manual transfer switch and with this I use the sogen to power the kitchen refrigerator, lights, a few outlets, and furnace blower motor for as long as solar input and battery keep things running each day. On days there are severe storms forcasted, I keep the unit charged but turned off as a backup in case of power loss. Oh yeah, the 12V - 145V solar input is a bonus so I can charge this thing with my 2 x 12.8V 100Ah Power Queen batteries (24V in series) and skip using the boost converter I needed with the 200P.
It will be great to have two of these units to use a a backup, especially on that can charge much more quickly from AC input just in case.
Love this thorough review! I didn't realize that the usb ports were limited!
They fixed the USB ports with a firmware update, see the pinned video in the comments section.
Excellent review. Having only a single usable 100W USB-C port wouldn't bother me (there are workarounds, like using 12VDC and/or 120VAC adapters), but what REALLY bothers me is the proprietary charging cables, especially the AC cable. Why not a standard computer-type AC cable? It's something to lose, forget, or wear out, just when you need it. /TILT/, sorry, for me that's going to be a dealbreaker, before even getting to the similar issue with the DC cable. If they're going to convert to a XT90, why not just start with that plug? The charging speed (and options) and AC output on this one look great, but it won't make my short list.
I agree on the charging ports. I'd much rather see a 'computer style' connector instead of something proprietary!
The standard IEC C13/C14 computer charging cable can only safely push 15A in the US or 1800W. To reach the max charge speed of 2400W which is 120V @ 20A they had to use a different receptacle. This is also why the larger AC300 and AC500 stations which support up to 3000W and 5000W of AC input power respectively can't use standard computer power cables and connectors. The smaller AC180 uses a standard IEC computer charging cable to support the station's 1440W max AC charging speed at 12A.
I’m glad to see that 12A is default, as that is the 80% of a 15a residential circuit or code compliant.
That way the average consumer who doesn’t understand electricity will not burn their house down by placing a 15A load on a 12A circuit.
Very timely review!! Great job!! Thanks
Very welcome!
Excellent video. Absolutely perfect. No waste but all the infoni need
Mega kudos for EMI testing! More testers need to pay attention to this important test. Typically, the inverters are not the noise EMI/RFI noise generation problem source. The DC charging is. Have you performed any RFI/EMI noise tests at HF (1.8MHz to 30MHz) and VHF (130MHz to 440MHz) while charging from DC? If this is an MPPT charger, those of us wanting to use this as power for radio communications over HF and VHF need to know this. Many MPPT chargers are not FCC compliant and render receivers nearly useless.
Yep, tested with both the AC output and DC output with my radio. Also tested with my guitar amp and EMI noise tester. Did you watch the video yet?
@@Jasonoid It is not the output that is typically the issue. It is the DC charging side. The MPPT chargers these units are using are horrific. Test the noise (EMI/RFI) at HF and VHF frequencies (1.8MHz - 450MHz) while the MPPT is getting full solar power. Way above audio and AM frequencies.
@@SLCompulsion way above my radio knowledge 😮 I didn't test that specifically on this model (or any other model). It seems someone who is familiar with all that needs to test these power stations specifically.
Fantastic review as usual. Thank you 🙏🏾
Yes, I have the AC 200 L power station I hooked up my 55 W dual refrigerator freezer and the next day I had 30% charge left. My trailer does not have air conditioning with the heat in the trailer cause it to drop sufficiently.?
I don't think that's heat, that's probably the background idle power usage of the inverter. Any other loads connected with the fridge? If the fridge is a DC fridge, you'll get WAY longer runtimes off the DC output.
Any positive /negative comments on Bluetti customer service - this is a big purchase and I would really be disappointed if they don't provide good support.
They revamped their customer support in the beginning of 2023. It's definitely improved over the last year. I have had much less negative comments on my Bluetti videos. You could always call them over the phone and test it out.
Hey @jasonoid, bluetti has put out a firmware update for the usbc ports that fixes* the problem you mentioned. You are able to pull more watts from the ports. Its not 200w total, but it looks like you're able to pull up to 150-180w now.
I updated the firmware, still haven't tested it yet. I'll put out a short soon so stay tuned to see the results.
Excellent presentation. Thank you. Really disappointed with the DC 12/48v output options. It will be interesting to see what kind of gizmo they come up with for the 48v output and how much that costs. Not really thrilled with the USB ports as you discuss. All of the newest Bluetti’s seem to for home use at 120v-AC and not for folks with trucks/vans/camping. Pecron and Oupes both are doing a far better job for the truck/van/vamping crowd.
Great obersvation. I feel the same way. Sad to see the king of all ports, Bluetti's 30 amp outout gone from the new lineup.
I agree
Yes, the cost of the D40 that will take the output of the 48 volt at 8 amps socket will be a key factor. But 48 volts at 8 amps is 384 watts. 384 watts at 12 volts is 32 amps. So, depending on the efficiency of the D40 conversion down to 12 volts, it probably will still give you the 30 amps(maybe even a little more) that the MAX provides.
Hi Jason. In your opinion, will the new 48 volt output allow for daisy chaining my old 200 max into the new 200 L ? this would essentially turn the old 200 Max into an expansion battery. If this is the case, I would buy the new 200L instead of an B230 battery.
The AC200L has the 48v output, which you could use to charge your AC200Max (since the power is coming out of the AC200L). I think that would be an efficient 'Expansion battery' option.
Jason. If purchasing the 48volt adapter, how does one charge a server rack battery? I’m new to this arena?
Can you draw power from the 4 wall outlets, and from the 1 30amp outlet a the same time?
I'd like to use it as a UPS for my TV/receiver, and then in case of outages... plug the house-inlet to the 30amp outlet... while leaving the TV/receiver plugged into the regular outlets.
Hi, I don't know for the futur, but for now I prefer the 12V 30A for vanlife.
Agree. I don't know who they're marketing to with a 48V output? And to use it in a van life scenario, they want you to buy another component?? That kind of defeats the 'all in one' concept. 🤷♂️
I think a lot of people like that option as well.
I think I prefer the new Pecron E1500LFP for my RV@@Jasonoid
In the 2,000WH ish models does this have the highest DC/solar input at 145vdc?
Ecoflow vs anker vs jackery ect ?
Yep, most other brands like Anker, Ugreen, and Ecoflow all have the dreaded 60v limit. This has 145v! 👍
Great in-depth review Jason. I like it better for sure over the ac200max but yea the usbc at 140? I tested the same and was wondering what was going on lol.
The worst part is that it's a 'designed feature' and not a bug... Oops for who thought that was a good design lol...
Hey mate, thank you so much for these amazing reviews I've learn so much from them! Are you planning on reviewing the Bluetti AC70 anytime soon ?
I might, I'm thinking about it.
That is a very high reading for Dirty Electricity. We have success with pairs of Greenwave Plug-in filters to bring that DE figure way down to 40mV, which is considered low noise. Also, way better for a person's health living in their RV...
I would like to see a select-able auxiliary output; 12v 30A, OR, 48v. That shouldn't be hard to do. Note that the new Zero Breeze is running at 48VDC,... much more efficient.
Also, it would help to also see the Wh that the fridge uses. This can vary greatly between fridges, and might be more useful to folks.
Great timing on this review...Black Friday!
Great idea with the swappable voltage output. That would be awesome for a power station to have both 12v and 48v available (even better if they were available at the same time). I have always wondered why these don't just have a port available for the direct battery output.
The AC200L runs at 51.2V, the plug voltage seems to be 51.2 until the last minutes of life where it goes down to 48v. But the plug is protected by a data pin, which makes it useless. So Bluetti must sell a cable that activate the current and send it to anderson plug. Then maybe hopefully we can plug a converter 48v8a to 12v30. But the D40 module they talk won’t help. It can only charge a battery. The only possibility is the anderson cable and buying a converter on Amazon.
A bluetti tech comfirmed the d40 cannot convert to 12v30a to plug directly on a fuse box. It seems to be a regulator that combine multiple source of energy, stabilize it for clean battery charging. I don’t the difference at the end. It should be 12v for the battery. So why it cannot be use directly to a 12v fuse box source? Maybe a specialist can give us some explanation..
Question: if you attach one of the additional batteries, what are both the charge, and discharge orders? If you have both an AC200L, and a 2nd battery plugged together, will they both charge off of one source, say a 350 watt portable solar panel? Will one battery charge first, then roll-over to the next? How does it work, or do you need to charge both separately?
Bluetti units seem to discharge and charge at the same time, it balances the power load between the two. The same is the case if you have multiple batteries connected.
@@Jasonoid - so, to confirm: if I have both an AC200L & battery connected together, they are treated as "One" unit for both charge, and discharge? Thanks for the response.
Correct.
Does it make sense to define how much power required to charge station and use them for comparison? I've found it's required to spend much more power than expected. For instance Ecoflow Delta 2 Max was charged with 2.6 kWh(AC) at 200W speed in my case. I would emphesize there is a problem with station so could be irrelevant for Delta 2 Max series.
Charging efficency losses is not something I have tracked.
@Jasonoid found that charging lost was even more than discharging. If summarize discharging/charging lost it would be quite huge value. ~800-900 wh per 2kWh. So for me it's quite interesting to know how different brands deal with it. I hope Bluetti is more effective here, but who knows... Is it a good idea to include such statistics in future comparisons?
Customer service is in the tank again. Tried several days and no one was available. Currently emailing with customer service because my AC200L will not charge through my Honda EU2000i inverter generator and they are currently working on the firmware. My suspicion is someone disabled or limited the AC charging and without it, this power station is worthless in an emergency situation with storms or loudspeakers and the grid down. I hope Bluetti can get their act together or their sales will go down when people find out their limitations.
Did you try turning on 'grid adaption mode' in the smart app?
How does a HAM radio operate in the facinity of the 200L? Or when used as either an AC c or DC power source?
Thanks, greatest video on this unit!
I don't have a HAM radio to test with, I did test with the small handheld AM radio though. If the radio is a couple feet away from the power station you shouldnt hear the noise.
Jason I can always count on you for an excellent honest review 👍 Bluetti still hasn’t won me over with anything yet PS I have yet to see the join button 🤷🏼♀️
Thanks, Randi!
Great Video! Thank you for pointing out these great upgrades!
You bet! Thanks for watching!
Lots of upgrades. Especially the AC charge option. The missing 12V 30A. Now makes is unusable for RV setups.
Do note, you can't shut the units off when PV is putting power in. You need to disconnect it first. Not sure why that is?
Correct, if the power ststion is charging via AC or DC input, you need to disconnect the charging source first to shut it off.
great review. One thing I was wondering is with the 200 max if you just leave it plugged in to the AC brick to charge the fan will run 24/7 until you unplug the brick. Now that there is no longer a brick, will the fans in the fans stop running once the unit is charged to 100%?
The fans hardly run on the new model, they only run while needed. Much improved over the AC200max. Most of the time you won't hear them. They are very quiet. I've noticed they run mostly if you fast charge or if you have a large load on the inverter.
I wish we could talk more about the use of the server rack battery! That's something I'm considering right now is to buy the AC 200l and get a server rack battery. Is that a good way to go? Would you charge the server rack battery with a separate solar charger or just use the unit?
I have a full video about using batteries to charge power stations HERE: ua-cam.com/video/tK4JKmfndh8/v-deo.html
I go through using a 48v battery in the video. It's a great option to extend runtime.
Does the ac200L have a 30 amp socket in order to plug our travel trailer electrical cord into?
Nope, you have to buy the D40 external unit....it's lame.
Good Morning .really enjoyed the info on this unit , having an issue and can't get an answer from Bluetti . on pass through charging I am using 800 watts going to an ac unit and have it plugged into a 2000 watt inverter for charging set on silent mode (so should be limited to 800 input ) but it is piling 1400 watts . so the question is does the pass through charging add the two togather so it is pulling 1400 watts even through it should be limited to 800 watts . Keeps popping my breaker .
When charging off AC, it will both charge the battery AND power the loads that are connected into the power station. You'll need to use the smart app to manually adjust the charging amperage to the exact point that it doesn't pop your breaker.
Good stuff 👏👏
I just bought one today, thanks Jason.
Right on! You'll enjoy it!
Are you pleased with this product? I just ordered it online right now
how about purchasing 2 or 3 of the AC180 or AC180p instead AND can move them around to where they are needed - just a thought
I have heard of some people doing that, I think a couple smaller batteries are just as useful as one larger one!
I have an AC200Max. My only complaint is the weight. I may be moving into an RV next year so I may go for a AC 180 for the RV since its easier to carry. I am hoping they can reduce the weight on the batteries. I just got the BougeRV CIGS Panels. Two, 200 watt panels. I just tested the first panel. Its great. I will set up the next panel this weekend. Then I will hook both panels up and test them out.
AWESOME! I have had my eyes on those CIGs panels, let me know how you like them and how they perform!
on the driveway lying flat, In the afternoon sun, panel not in prime position. I was getting 101 watts@@Jasonoid I need to watch a video on how to hook up the second CIGS panel. Then I will hook up the Bluetti PV 350. Not sure how to hook up all three? It may make a good video for you.
Just watch and older video of yours on connecting in series. I will work on that this weekend with the two, 200 Watt CIGS panels.@@Jasonoid
You could probably connect many of those in series, just don't go over 150voc. The VOC adds up together each panel you add in series.
Just got the Second CIGS Panel hooked up in Series. Works great, on a cloudy/sunny day with panels in a bad position in the driveway, lying flat. I am pulling in 172 watts. Fluctuating with passing clouds and low, winter afternoon sun.@@Jasonoid
I'd love to see you cover charging directly from the alternator in a vehicle like Goal Zero Yeti.. at extra expense of a module. How can this be done with the Bluetti? I've seen folks chat about a Victron DC-DC charger.. others say no no.. Use a DC-DC converter. Help?
I have a full video on that topic, just gotta search the channel:
ua-cam.com/video/I78RxjRXTn4/v-deo.html
Can i use the DC output to power my van build? Bluetti doesn't have the D40 voltage regulator yet. Is there another aftermarket voltage regulator that can be used?
Bluetti just annnouced the AC240, it has the 30 amp 12v output that would work well for your Van Build. I'd also suggest taking a look at the UGREEN 2200, excellent performance with a 30 amp output: ua-cam.com/video/Gxa6aUkebcc/v-deo.html
Hey Jason watchin in Grenada in Carribbean does 200L have ground
Yes, it has the ability to ground it. It comes with a grounding terminal and grounding screw near the charging ports.
I got the 200Max based on your earlier review. I’m happy with it generally except for that damn charging brick and slow charge rate. The unit they sent you had a silent brick. The one I got had the noisy fan which is on ALL the time it’s plugged in. So this one looked perfect until you got to the DC. They dump the 30amp plug which is what I use 80% of the time and stick you with a cigarette plug and 10 amps?? It’s 2023, when will they get rid of that ancient technology? They have adapter plugs for everything else imaginable!
I was pretty let down when I saw the new specs. The AC200MAX was the bomb, with these simple upgrades and keeping the 30amp output would have been amazing.... Not a fan of the newer change away from high DC output.
'MERICA... 🇺🇸
Unfortunately those are the electrical standards in your country as opposed to other continents that run twice the voltage but half the current to achieve those same watts. If you got with the program, Bluetti could make you a better unit (2x AC outputs at twice the power, rather than the 4x AC outputs at half the power, each). I just got an AC180 here in Australia, and it's an awesome unit, perhaps the AC200L in the Aussie standards will be the unit that all you Americans want but as yet can't attain.
@@joebloggs6131 we can own guns here on America, and that's pretty cool.
@@Jasonoid
Can own guns here too, just need to get a weapons licence that means you know how to safely store the weapon, and keep ammunition separately. Really reduces the risk of getting shot in 5th Grade Math Class
Can I hook up 5000 BTU air conditioner with 115 V?
Most 5000btu units pull around 450 to 500 watts yes that will run on this just fine.
Which one is better? BLUETTI Ac200L or EcoFlow delta 2 Max? Both have same characteristics.
Great review which I will share with my group. I'm wondering if there is a weakness here though when connecting an expansion battery. I want to buy this unit (as an upgrade from the AC200P) and I would like to connect my existing B230 battery to get me through the night. If the D050S charge enhancer is used to connect the B230 to the solar panels and then the B230 is connected to the AC200L via aviation cable to the Solar input on the AC200L, the B230 can still run out of power at night and sleep/die and will not be "woken up" by the AC200L if it still has some power. I dont think it can sense available power from the panels that could wake up and refill the B230. Am I wrong? Can you use the AC200L to automatically wake up the B230 so that it can start charging from the panels again ? I am looking for something that can run automatically and perpetually as long as weather cooperates. I could buy (2) B300 batteries but thats a lot of cheddar. I also have a third party 200ah LifePo4 battery but not sure if I can get that into the equation to keep the B230 awake.
What about surge? Can you start up shop power tools with large surges without the battery shutting down?
@Jasnoid if you set the ac200l in standard mode and reduce the max available current off grid to 2-4 amps, how many watts come into the power station. Also, do you have concerns that Bluetti uses non-standard cables for charging? I searched on Amazon for aviation connectors and found limited resources.
Yes, unfortunately it does use proprietary charging cables. Bluetti has always done that on their 2000wh devices (for solar and AC input).
How are you going to limit the power from the wall? I am not aware of a way to do that through the circuitry in my house.
The current limiting (custom charging speed) is a process of the power station charging board. I believe setting the custom charging speed will be the only way to do that. I walked through that in while going over the Bluetti smart app.
@@Jasonoid yeah I wanted to know, if we can reduce the charging speed similar to ecoflow
I know this is 3 months old, wondering if you ever encountered circuit breaker trip when to try to charge from home current. I had charged my unit to full capacity at home and ran some tests, got it down to about 37% charge and decided to charge it up. Now it trips 15amp circuit every time with nothing else on it when plugged into my RV which is plugged into 50amp shore power. Kind of lost now, cannot get it charged back up.
What charging speed is it set at? Can you adjust the charging speed?
@@Jasonoid Jason it was set to standard. I just got setup at a new camping site and will review it again and try and plug directly into the campsite 110 outlet first. Thank you very much for responding!
I ordered this unit. I would have liked that 12v x 30 amp socket for my van build. I will have to use a 120v x 12v converter now, but I can adjust.
We'll have to see what the D40 can offer once it's announced.
Amazing video. Great quality.
Thanks! 😁
Could you do a video about the dual b300 via daisy chain and test why 200max couldn’t then have 4*b300
I only have one B300. The three B300s batteries I have are not compatible with this model, they only work with the AC500. The expansion cable is too large to connect, unfortunately.
Too bad. Cause I think you can see my thought process. If you can daisy chain b300 then should there be a limit?
@4:34 did the device have ECO-AC feature? Was it disabled for this no load test?
My AC70 has a Eco AC &DC feature where it shuts off output if the load hasn't been more than a set value for a set time.
Yes, I disabled the Eco modes for these standby tests so I can see how much power is used 👍
142W on the 12V
142W total on the USBC outputs
Rather coincidental. I wonder if it's 142W total across all the 12V and 5V DC outputs, or if they are just using the same buck circuit for each.
I tested both at the same time, I got around 250w from both... But yes... That's why I thought it was a firmware issue, and just needed to be 'reprogrammed'... I guess it wasnt that 'simple' haha
Thank You , so much ..
very informative..
Great, while long, video. Very informative comparison chart. Where would you place the Bluetti AC70 in that list ???
I haven't tested the AC70 for the grading sheet.
After reviewing your fantastic video, I happened to notice not once did you mention a word about the RV 30amp cord!! If bluetti has deleted that popular option in my opinion, that would be a grave mistake on bluetti's part. Im in the market to power my RV with that RV 30 amp cord. I guess I'll my money $$$ with another company to meat my needs. Hello Delta pro!!
Huh? There's a 30 amp plug on the front of the unit for an RV 😂🤣
@@Jasonoid you should have shown and tested it.
My last purchase was the Ac180. Thinking a out skipping 2000 series and going Ac300 or delta pro. Does each additional bluetti etti battery have a parasitic draw if multiple batteries are connected?
The batteries have very little draw, no need to worry about additional losses when using them on the AC300.
Can I use a AC 200 L as expansion battery, more or less, for a AC 180?
Not in an efficient way. AC charging would be the only way to dump power into the other model.
Am having difficult finding a unit that can support ham radio 20-25 amp dc voice transmit load. Any ideas which brands and models to look at ? (Would use Anderson power poles output connected to what ever radio plug)
I tested the Oupes Mega 3 last week that has a 30 amp DC output
I also tested the Pecron E1500lfp that has a 30 amps DC output
Both options should work well.... but I'm not sure how clean the output will be vs using a standalone 12v LFP battery like this: amzn.to/49Ke8FR
I just purchased with your code. I unfortunately had to return my Pecron E1500LFP. It was perfect but made all lights flicker to the point I couldn’t stand it. I suspect there was a problem with the AC inverter sine wave coming out. I’m really excited about the AC200L though.
LED lights are very sensitive. You should have better performance with this model but it also depends on the LED bulb.
@@JasonoidI was sending back videos using all kinds of different LEDs and it was always the same. I even bought a cheap oscilloscope to help diagnose, I was really set on trying to fix it.
BLUETTI works for me because of the high solar input voltage. Everyone else maxes out at 60v whereas they go up to 145v. Last thing I want to do is remove the panels and wire them in parallel to drop the voltage.
Would I be able to use my GoalZero Boulder solar panel? It has an 8mm port
You'll need an adapter 8mm female to MC4 like this: amzn.to/3BoDsEx
@@Jasonoid Thanks so much!!!
Hey man, I’ve got a AC200L and 180. My needs have changed, so my question is can I power the 180 from a 200 rather than an expansion battery?
AC1800 does 500w solar input and has an 1800w inverter. The AC200L has 1200w solar input and a 2400w inverter. You can power more things at the same time with the larger model, along with faster charging.
Can I use it in UPS mode for my sump pump?They recommend not to charge and discharge it at the same time.Isn't it that case?
In UPS mode, it bypasses the battery and puts power straight out to the appliance (sump pump). It only uses the battery once the power goes out.
Not available on Canadian website, guess I’ll go with Ecoflow Delta 2 Max and 220W solar panel for $2k
Maybe they haven't updated the website yet? The Delta 2 Max is an excellent option as well.
I prefer the 30A 12V DC output to this. Puzzling decision, which gets a pass from me in terms of buying this unit. I generally look for the best DC capability I can find, as it suits my RV and off-grid needs better than AC on the whole.
That's my opinion as well, bummer they changed it up. I'll keep everyone updated on the D40 to see what it's all about.
Can you make it stop charging you reach a certain battery level like stop at 80% and shutdown at 20% charge?
I’m pretty sure my ac 300 has this feature. Haven’t tried using that feature though
Hi! Can you dual charge with solar panels and the car ? They share the same input so I was wondering how to achieve that. Thank you very much !
No, you'd have to choose one or the other since there's only one charging port.
@@Jasonoid Is there any unit that this is possible ?
@@carlosbelaustegui3546 Ugreen 2200 has dual DC input ports. The Ecoflow delta 2 Max also has dual DC input ports. Both those units would work in your scenario. I have review on both.
@@JasonoidYes, I checked all your videos. Great btw ! There are two problems with the Ugreen 2200 : It doesn't support dual charging as in your spreadsheet and almost impossible to get here in Europe.
@@carlosbelaustegui3546 yep, it's hard to find the perfect power station. You pretty much have to settle on what works best with what's currently available.
Great review. The USB-C limit is likely a thermal problem that was missed and now they can’t fix it. The 48V output baffles me. Probably cost cutting as the internal bus is likely 48 V and this allowed them to remove the 48->12V 30A buck converter and make users pay for it separately with an overpriced box that includes $$ sunk into a special connector, cable and enclosure. Noisy AC and poor DC. This one’s a big miss.
I think you are spot on with the USBc limit and the move to a 48v output on cost savings. The price is a bit less than last generation. Thanks for your insight!
Great review Ja son. I ha be been waiting for this ever since I heard about this unit. It is definitely a winner. I think I like this better than the Delta 2 Max. Mainly because they do a better job with expansion batteries. I also don’t like a EcoFlow not including solar cables. Would love your opinion between this and the Delta 2 Max, or between the AC180 and the Delta 2.
The Delta 2 and AC180 are very similar, same with the AC200L and the Delta 2 Max. It's hard to chose one over the other unless I know the exact use case because they do have their advantages in certain areas haha
So I bought a delta 2 due to price even though I was leaning toward the ac180. We also got 3 ac180’s for work. Both great units. However I am now glad I got the delta 2. Their app is just more sophisticated than the Bluetti, it allows you to choose a specific charge rate and floor and ceiling. So unless you need the couple hundred extra wh, I would recommend the Delta 2 right now. I do prefer everything front facing on the ac180, and Bluetti theoretically could improve their app to be comparable. Like I said, both are great units and at the end of the day I would be happy with either, but right now I am glad I went with the Delta2.
@@davidcarrico3385 Thank you so much. This is very helpful. I currently own power stations from companies and agree with you. Seems lately, I have been seeing better deals on Bluetti units that EcoFlow, but maybe I am not looking very carefully. Another interesting thing is that each company usually has one feature the other does not have and I want, like the dual solar input on the Delta 2 max vs. the more capable expansion batteries on Bluetti. Thank you so much for your help.
@@litnoregrets7551 so true, my Delta 2 purchase was on prime day this summer when the ac180 was still 799. I wish the ac180 had managed expansion, as I would have waited and gotten that instead, as like you, I am very impressed with their expansion batteries. That’s one of the downsides of the delta2 expansion battery, it does nothing other than add capacity and they charge a higher premium than I think they should for that.