do you think a bluetti ac70 can run a electric dryer that is 120V @ 15A? if it's in power lifting mode which is made to cover up to 2000w by lowering the volts for resistive heating devices? my concern is the AC outlet is 120V but 8.33A.
I really do not have an answer for you but I don't think the ac70 could handle it. I would first worry about the surge. Looking at the Bluetti website it states the ac70 surge can cover 1500 watts, and 1000 watts total AC draw. 120x15 = 1800 watts. That 1800 is above the specs of the ac70, even that is only about 20 minutes if it could run. Half that amps would be 996 watts. I don't think the draw would be enough to get a dryer to work at drying but I'm no means an expert in that situation. I'd also be worried about the electric dryer with only getting partial voltage - I don't know if it would get damaged. I've been curiously looking at the ventless dryers as they are 120v (mine is 240v) but have not as of yet. But I'll probably go back to a gas dryer as those pull small watts and offload the heating part to using gas. Making a better sustainable solution for me. Hope that helps. You may want to join the facebook Bluetti page as there are many experts there and other people who have tried a variety of things. facebook.com/groups/1479447962226741 . My 200max now has 2xB230s so I'm holding a 6kw storage system now . I do have an EB3A (sold the EB70S) and replaced it with Pecron e1000pro (1,000 wh), e1500pro (1450wh), and S1500F (1450wh) all for portability and camping due to size and weight (enough power for a 200w DC or AC heater which is enough to increase the temp during 30s to the mid 60s slowly but it works well for an entire night.
@@gottalovetheknowledge4749 well I just did a quick test to determine if it was possible. Using the ac70 on power lifting mode and fully charged I got 38 minutes of runtime and sustained 1030w at 100, 115, 120A with 10.2, 8.8, 8.5A respectively. if I had run those wet clothes on highest spin setting instead of a quick wash cycle, they might have fully dried. It was 4 shirts, 1 pant, 1 blue jeans. The heater did heat up and work and nearly got them done. Not bad, adding that extra 100ah battery should solve the problem.
do you think a bluetti ac70 can run a electric dryer that is 120V @ 15A? if it's in power lifting mode which is made to cover up to 2000w by lowering the volts for resistive heating devices? my concern is the AC outlet is 120V but 8.33A.
I really do not have an answer for you but I don't think the ac70 could handle it.
I would first worry about the surge. Looking at the Bluetti website it states the ac70 surge can cover 1500 watts, and 1000 watts total AC draw. 120x15 = 1800 watts. That 1800 is above the specs of the ac70, even that is only about 20 minutes if it could run. Half that amps would be 996 watts. I don't think the draw would be enough to get a dryer to work at drying but I'm no means an expert in that situation.
I'd also be worried about the electric dryer with only getting partial voltage - I don't know if it would get damaged. I've been curiously looking at the ventless dryers as they are 120v (mine is 240v) but have not as of yet. But I'll probably go back to a gas dryer as those pull small watts and offload the heating part to using gas. Making a better sustainable solution for me.
Hope that helps. You may want to join the facebook Bluetti page as there are many experts there and other people who have tried a variety of things. facebook.com/groups/1479447962226741
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My 200max now has 2xB230s so I'm holding a 6kw storage system now . I do have an EB3A (sold the EB70S) and replaced it with Pecron e1000pro (1,000 wh), e1500pro (1450wh), and S1500F (1450wh) all for portability and camping due to size and weight (enough power for a 200w DC or AC heater which is enough to increase the temp during 30s to the mid 60s slowly but it works well for an entire night.
@@gottalovetheknowledge4749 well I just did a quick test to determine if it was possible. Using the ac70 on power lifting mode and fully charged I got 38 minutes of runtime and sustained 1030w at 100, 115, 120A with 10.2, 8.8, 8.5A respectively. if I had run those wet clothes on highest spin setting instead of a quick wash cycle, they might have fully dried. It was 4 shirts, 1 pant, 1 blue jeans. The heater did heat up and work and nearly got them done. Not bad, adding that extra 100ah battery should solve the problem.
just be careful of devices that have electronics in them (computer chips, etc) as the lower voltage could damage them