Hicksy 92
Member
Hi all , anyone charging there ebikes with a portable power staion, ideally I would like to charge 2 at the same time while they are in my van , if so any recommendations welcomed .
thanks
thanks
Sounds like you need to re-consider your plumbing.That reminds me, got to service my portable 2.8kVA petrol generator in case the shit hits the mains power fan this winter.
Yes definitely cheaper , but would like to be charging while on the move . Just wonder who’s using what brands , models etc ,Lots of Black Friday discounts out there on power stations right now.
Just remember that if you have say a 500watt hour battery you need at least a 500watt hour power station if you expect to charge it completely and for two bikes double that. The inverter in the power station would have to be rated at 1000w.
It might be cheaper to get a small 2000w petrol/propane generator although it would be noisier.
EcoFlow Delta Max.Hi all , anyone charging there ebikes with a portable power staion, ideally I would like to charge 2 at the same time while they are in my van , if so any recommendations welcomed .
thanks
I use a Jackery 1000 explorer which I'm really happy with and has two 3 pin ac outlets so I can charge 2 bikes at the same timeHi all , anyone charging there ebikes with a portable power staion, ideally I would like to charge 2 at the same time while they are in my van , if so any recommendations welcomed .
thanks
Yes they are ok. The Delta Max is the same just twice the capacity.I use a Jackery 1000 explorer which I'm really happy with and has two 3 pin ac outlets so I can charge 2 bikes at the same time
Yeah I think if I bought another I'd go for a bigger capacity but I got mine at a reasonable price of £550Yes they are ok. The Delta Max is the same just twice the capacity.
Still using it a lot. Great bit of kit.Look up a review that @Rob Rides EMTB did on his power station, he liked it a lot.
You can charge in the van while you are driving with just an inverter to your cigarette lighter, maybe not two bikes depending on your cigarette lighter amperage.
My charger is a 2amp at 120v that means it would most likely work on a cigarette outlet. Like I said it depends.
There are cigarette lighter outlets that can handle it.
That's right. They will put out 150W even with an inverter which won't run a bike charger that I've seen.It's impossible to prove a negative, but I think that's false. The highest I've ever seen is 15A, and that's rare. It was also backed up by scary-small wires. What car have you seen with a 20A outlet? Or are you talking about an aftermarket add-on, in which case you have to go to the battery anyway? I was shocked to see that my Tesla is just over 15 which is high, Jeep 10, Smart car 8.
First blurb from Google...
10-amp
Most cigarette lighters run on a 10-amp fuse that allows for 12 volts or 120 watts of power output at maximum. There may be some variance on this depending on your vehicle. Check your owner's manual or the cover of your cigarette lighter socket to find the specific output for your vehicle.
I have a blog and some video guides to this, which lets me go away for 2 or 3 days of biking even when it's not fully sunny, using a Bluetti EB150. I also have a much less portable AC300.Hi all , anyone charging there ebikes with a portable power staion, ideally I would like to charge 2 at the same time while they are in my van , if so any recommendations welcomed .
thanks
Hello. I am looking at various ones of these and need advice. size, Watts, what do I need. I dont want to power the house but basically a emergency back up 1. Run some small appliances maybe up to a small air conditioner 2. Charge from wall plug and maybe future solar panels 3. Run in parallel (is this even possible) to increase capacity? 4. Storage length 5. Price versus capacity 6. Brand integrity/qulity/longevity The current idea is to leave them charged to use if we get a brownout and in the future rig them to solar panel fr longer outages. I would prefer a few smaller ones (maybe 500W+) over one bigger one but advic is neededIt's impossible to prove a negative, but I think that's false. The highest I've ever seen is 15A, and that's rare. It was also backed up by scary-small wires. What car have you seen with a 20A outlet? Or are you talking about an aftermarket add-on, in which case you have to go to the battery anyway? I was shocked to see that my Tesla is just over 15 which is high, Jeep 10, Smart car 8.
First blurb from Google...
10-amp
Most cigarette lighters run on a 10-amp fuse that allows for 12 volts or 120 watts of power output at maximum. There may be some variance on this depending on your vehicle portable power station. Check your owner's manual or the cover of your cigarette lighter socket to find the specific output for your vehicle.
I use my Jackery explorer 1000 occasionally to charge my bike and it appears to take the same amount of time as using the mains .Maybe silly question but charge time from portable power stations like Jackery, are they any different from charging at home from AC outlet?
And perhaps on a related note, any way of speeding up Orbea Rise M series charge time. 5 hours full charge is slowwwwww
Maybe silly question but charge time from portable power stations like Jackery, are they any different from charging at home from AC outlet?
And perhaps on a related note, any way of speeding up Orbea Rise M series charge time. 5 hours full charge is slowwwwww
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