NO MORE GAS Generators? ECOFLOW DELTA PRO Review

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024

Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @SilverCymbal
    @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +72

    Ecoflow Delta Pro Now: ecoflow.com/collections/delta-series?aff=37

    • @DonaldAJr
      @DonaldAJr 3 года назад +12

      I wish I had the $2,000 I could purchase one for. Don't get me wrong, I figure that's a fair price but Workers' Compensation doesn't pay my paralyzed butt well enough to live in my house with subsidizing my mortgage by renting out a room. But yes, that's a different subject.

    • @Unknown-sf6cs
      @Unknown-sf6cs 3 года назад +1

      can you please include Celsius temperatures because i dont live in the usa and it i don’t understand f temperatures

    • @DonaldAJr
      @DonaldAJr 3 года назад +11

      @@Unknown-sf6cs That's just like we don't understand Celsius temperatures. It's always easier for us to do a little Google or search engine lookup of saying what is this degree in Fahrenheit in Celsius or for you Celsius to Fahrenheit.

    • @DonaldAJr
      @DonaldAJr 3 года назад +1

      @@Unknown-sf6cs meaning, what is 76 degrees Fahrenheit in Celsius?

    • @kellyweaver8422
      @kellyweaver8422 3 года назад +14

      Convert F to C. Subtract 32 from the Farenheit temperature. Then divide that result by 1.8
      75°F -32 = 43
      43 ÷ 1.8 = 23.9° C

  • @MrMtrent5
    @MrMtrent5 Год назад +103

    Just completed the break-in period and so far the unit is operating perfectly ruclips.net/user/postUgkxOTeIs0vv4_9B5hsmnLsk9r930uDQLu_Y . I was amazed by just how quiet this little guy is. I kept having to walk down the driveway to the generator to make sure it was still running. In fact, the most annoying noise coming from the set-up is a high-pitched chirping coming from the pressure regulator on the propane line. I suppose it's possible my other propane-powered generator's pressure regulator is making the same noise, but the generator itself is so loud I've never noticed it. Build quality so far is excellent. My only nit is the service panel is a little tricky to remove. I feel like I might break off one of the plastic tabs when bending it back. I probably just need to work out the technique, so will not hold it against Champion.Next week I intend to fully load the unit to charge a large battery pack and will update this review if there's any problem (3000W continuous load vs a rated 3100W capacity while using propane). Absent any trouble there, I'm 100% pleased with this purchase.

  • @DK85
    @DK85 3 года назад +13

    I see so many elderly folks in my neighborhood getting Generac gas/propane whole-house backups installed. They want the peace of mind and they have the money. They are paying 8K-11K once the generators are in (they wait for MONTHS!) and then have an annual checkup fee of a couple hundred bucks to check the oil and so forth.
    This ECOFLOW level of technology is going to be the NEW way to do whole-house backups for sure.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +5

      I feel exactly the same, they have no idea how expensive those get year after year

    • @tubemember21
      @tubemember21 3 года назад +4

      I chuckle when I see people with those in my neighborhood. We get maybe 2 power outages a year and they never last more than a few hours.
      I get the worry about basement flooding but a $250 battery backup sump pump is just as good in that scenario.

    • @dashriprock7036
      @dashriprock7036 3 года назад +5

      @@Japplesnap i agree. people that dont live in hurricane areas or tornado alley as i do,dont put the same value on a generator...the costs of maintaining a conventional generator i consider to be cheap insurance.this unit is ok..and might be a good addition.but not a replacement.

    • @neoasura
      @neoasura 2 года назад +1

      Yeah the cost to use ratio on those Generacs are horrible, for that price I can stay at a hotel for 4 months during a power outage. We don't live in a society where that happens, and if we did, that money would be better spent buying camping equipment then.

    • @neoasura
      @neoasura 2 года назад +1

      @@Japplesnap So you consider 10K to have power in your house for 3 days a good investment? lol.

  • @jeffgarnaas5711
    @jeffgarnaas5711 2 года назад +14

    I built these portable solar charged power packs out of pelican boxes and using lead acid marine batteries in 1995.Mine were watertight,and had 120 volt inverters.I even filed for patents on it with the uspto in 1995.These generators are not new,just improved using more modern tech wich was not around in 1995.

    • @manuelg4867
      @manuelg4867 2 года назад +1

      sure you did grandpa.

    • @manuelg4867
      @manuelg4867 2 года назад

      @@imoldgreggboosh3467 You will submit to Allah!

  • @darrelmartin8261
    @darrelmartin8261 3 года назад +27

    Combine this with a small propane inverter generator to pick up the slack from the solar panels and you can easily be electrically independent for many weeks with a small propane tank stockpile. Impressive.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +9

      Watch for my review next week from Ecoflow. They came up with a small booster generator, I think Elon Musk bought, they have more innovations this month than most companies had in 3 years

    • @pokemonfan-hx7ko
      @pokemonfan-hx7ko 2 года назад

      Any recommendations?

    • @geod3589
      @geod3589 2 года назад +1

      Yes, using propane gen is so much better than gasoline.

  • @clarkkent4991
    @clarkkent4991 2 года назад +9

    I really like that you ACTUALLY showed the inputs for the cables that join the additional battery with the Pro. I have seen a lot of these videos for this product , but for some reason most people don’t show the ports up close. Seeing them up close shows me actually how they can be joined. Thanks.

  • @hungryhungryhummer
    @hungryhungryhummer 3 года назад +103

    Not technically a “generator” per say. But this is the best design I’ve ever seen for a portable or backup power source. Charging from solar, the wall, and ev stations is brilliant. As well as the daisy chaining ability.

    • @davelawson2564
      @davelawson2564 3 года назад +14

      its UPS /battery source. good design. not generator as falsely claimed

    • @delanos53
      @delanos53 3 года назад +7

      Unless it's got LiFePO4 batteries it won't last long 500 charges and a regular lion battery degrades to 80% capacity. 3500 for the lifpro4 battert. Lithium ion phosphate.

    • @terjeoseberg990
      @terjeoseberg990 3 года назад +7

      @@delanos53, He says at 1:03 of the video that it is LiFePO4 (Lithium “Iron” Phosphate).

    • @aussiegruber86
      @aussiegruber86 3 года назад +3

      Does it not generate electricity?

    • @tecager
      @tecager 3 года назад +11

      @@justkiddin1980 if you run outta gas with a standard generator you’re effed up atleast this has solar charging to keep the party going

  • @budc.8172
    @budc.8172 3 года назад +8

    The ecoflow delta already saved my family once. We were going to go camping with our travel trailer but our truck broke down outside palm springs in 100+ temps. I was able to hook our portable AC unit to the delta and run it for an hour as we waited for the tow truck to arrive.
    P.S. For the guy who commented doubting why I carry one with me on trips then deleted your comment. I carry one because my family member uses a CPAP and having an Ecoflow Delta allows them to still use it if the RV park we are at looses power as they have in the past. It also allows us to boondock without having to run a loud generator.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +1

      Wow thats awesome. I use the Delta all the time for lights and tools and it has held up super well over the past year +

  • @TheSulross
    @TheSulross 2 года назад +6

    I built a system roughly 10 years ago using a bank of those big lead acid batteries - about 8 of them - they're huge and sit in their own container and are hooked into a Trace inverter - if the inverter senses the utility power dropping off it will automatically switch to the batteries (and it keeps the batteries charged when their is grid power). This system works great and will even keep desktop computers from rebooting when it switches to batteries). But even though only crucial house circuits are backed by this, it will only run things for a matter of hours - out central heating system has an electric blower fan). Naturally most of our power outages are in the winter on occasions with heavy snow fall - branches start breaking off of trees and bring down power lines. The outages can be so wide spread that it can take days for the utility company to repair all the disruptions. We will typically have live on backup power for several days - maybe up to 5 to 7 days. Needless to say, even with this really slick battery backed system, we still have a gasoline-powered generator. If can only afford one backup system - get a gas or propane (or natural gas) backup generator - you don't want to gamble that power will be down for just hours vs days.

    • @mac11380
      @mac11380 2 года назад +1

      It wouldn't be cheap, but if you swapped out the lead acid for LiFePO4 batteries, it would have a lot more power.

  • @timandnatd
    @timandnatd 3 года назад +21

    It was charging at ~2,600 watts on the EV charge station instead of 3,000 watts because public chargers operate on single phrase commercial lines instead of split phase. At home, if your use your EVSE on Split Phase, you are getting 240 volts at 12.5 amps. When you go to a commercial single phase, it’s at 208 volts at the same 12.5 amps. So that will give you a little less power since the voltage is lower.

  • @BillLaBrie
    @BillLaBrie 3 года назад +137

    I know you know this, but it would be great if we could just call these “power packs.” Generators don’t take hours to refuel.

    • @Unknown-un6nt
      @Unknown-un6nt 3 года назад +4

      Also, they can’t run powertools at a jobsite. Chop saw, miter saw, compressor, chargers, fan, all at the same time

    • @truthministries77
      @truthministries77 2 года назад +4

      @@Unknown-un6nt why can't they?

    • @brandonjones8223
      @brandonjones8223 2 года назад +7

      @@Unknown-un6nt YES THEY CAN

    • @Unknown-un6nt
      @Unknown-un6nt 2 года назад +9

      Why are you so butthurt? No they can’t. Just because you use capitals doesn’t make you right. My power tools use too many amps, and too much wattage. My gas generator can power all my tools simultaneously. I can be cutting maple crown on my chop saw, while my helper is ripping 96” hardwood strips, all while having multiple battery chargers charging, a shop fan blowing, a compressor running, and a worklight on if it gets too late. ALL DAY LONG. For twelve hours or longer, if need be. Do your research. These solar generators are nowhere near being able to power a construction jobsite all day. Don’t be ignorant.

    • @justadam1917
      @justadam1917 2 года назад +7

      It has no generator facility it is just a battery

  • @bluejayjimmy
    @bluejayjimmy 3 года назад +3

    I will be ordering two 3600 KWh units with batteries for my 40' diesel pusher RV. I have been waiting for this and October's rollout is not that long to wait.

    • @bluejayjimmy
      @bluejayjimmy 3 года назад +1

      I fully understand the capabilities of this system along with the installation in any application you could possibly think of. If you didn't know, the batteries in question look somewhat like the Delta Pro units except they have no inverter built into them. You can hook up 2 Delta Pro Smart Batteries to each Delta Pro unit, I was on the fence about purchasing 4 of these batteries, but in my application, I only need 2 of them for the 14.4kWh 240v system I desire. What makes the Ecoflow system so unique is the fact that it's so versatile and expandable. I will be purchasing 2 Delta Pro 3600kWh units & 2 Delta Pro 3600kWh Smart batteries, a dual output cable, needed for my 240v RV installation, and the optional remote control. I will be using the existing solar panels on my RV with a combined output of 1600W, negating any need to plug into an external charging source to keep the system charged. I hope this answers any questions you might have, any further explanation will result in a consulting fee. lol

    • @HarnessAHealthyLife
      @HarnessAHealthyLife 2 года назад

      @@bluejayjimmy I’m in 32’ travel trailer. I am not mechanically inclined at all. I will be living off grid on property I bought, until I can build. Will this system be sufficient or do you recommend a different set up?

  • @PSYCHOPATHiO
    @PSYCHOPATHiO 3 года назад +73

    you have to differenciate between a generator or a UPS

    • @MyKharli
      @MyKharli 3 года назад +1

      i put a big car battery on my ups for much longer up time !

    • @MyKharli
      @MyKharli 3 года назад +1

      @@GrzegorzDurda i dont know but i have plenty time to log off properly and finish end of film or game , 15 minutes ? then i suspect it might overheat . It auto shut down on low battery . thats about 300w , maybe briefly 100w more if gaming heavily . I notice i cannot switch it on if i already got a power cut..it needs the power on , register a power cut then it uses battery ..i do not know why, i guess some relay or something . It keeps the big battery charged up without any apparent issues even with over 15 times the capacity of the little battery it had .

  • @jkco4300
    @jkco4300 3 года назад +111

    I appreciate how your reviews are right to the point and packed with all the info and use cases in 10 minutes.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +9

      Thank you. This one was very tough I absolutely love it and could have made the video an hour but figured as questions come up maybe I can do a follow up if there is interest

    • @derek723
      @derek723 3 года назад +3

      Arguably the two most important specs of a generator besides wattage & peak wattage - sound levels and run time - I believe weren't mentioned in this video. If they were and I just accidentally missed something, I apologize ahead of time

    • @joeeggfromleigh
      @joeeggfromleigh 3 года назад +8

      This is not a review, it's a paid advertisement. He only tells you the upside, no cons or downside. I'd take the info he's presenting more seriously if he did an actual review.

    • @Mulletforhire
      @Mulletforhire 2 года назад +1

      @@joeeggfromleigh agreed, this is TRASH 🗑️

    • @Eye_of_state
      @Eye_of_state 2 года назад +2

      @@SilverCymbal A good honest question is, can you solar power charge, as you are using it?

  • @I0sweeper0I
    @I0sweeper0I 3 года назад +22

    Ecoflow and Bluetti are the new leaders for solar generators in my opinion, time for Jackery and Goal Zero to catch up. :)

    • @toobglued
      @toobglued 3 года назад +1

      i agree. Ive got a couple 'jackery units and for a while i was looking to get the larger 1500 or wait til next years restocking of the 2000 but I think by then bluetti and reflow will have taken over. goal zero is dead. they had it but never kept up with competition . even jackery is loosing the race

    • @Shamano37
      @Shamano37 3 года назад

      I agree Goal Zero needs to catch up, although I have a few of their batteries and their customers service is great.

    • @joebuck4496
      @joebuck4496 2 года назад +1

      Bluetti AC300 looks like the current champ.

  • @davideyt1242
    @davideyt1242 3 года назад +11

    2 EcoFlow Delta Pro will cost at the moment about $7000 USD, for that and a little change more you can already buy all the bits and parts for a big-boys, real, permanent off-grid solar setup for your home, inverter, mppt, solar panels and batteries included.
    The moment those portable power station are priced higher than about $2000 USD, the price-performance is taking a massive beating

    • @splinter2804
      @splinter2804 2 года назад

      good point

    • @noddybigears3564
      @noddybigears3564 2 года назад +1

      $7000 seems a lot for something that can store about 50 cents worth of electricity fully charged.

  • @Woolf81
    @Woolf81 3 года назад +10

    Keep one or two of these in your EV as fuel cans with solar power charging…Awesome review.

  • @TheMrpoet
    @TheMrpoet 3 года назад +12

    Great information. I saw the EcoFlow on display at HSN or QVC and was impressed with the unit and the price. I have friends that live in the Philippines and that country is always experiencing brownouts, just like our blackouts but more frequent and longer duration. This unit is perfect for the Philippines.

  • @TheGazmondo
    @TheGazmondo 3 года назад +8

    To put it simply, this is NOT a generator. This is a well designed power pack .
    It doesn’t generate power, it stores power.

    • @aserabus
      @aserabus 2 года назад

      Yes, but you can charge from the sun. Whenever your out of gas with the gas generators, unless you have access to more gas, your SOL. Not only that, you cant put gas generators into your home. This thing is a game changer, hands down.

    • @jeremysmithpr
      @jeremysmithpr Год назад

      @@aserabus its more batteries....electric crap is getting out of hand

  • @misohoney4656
    @misohoney4656 2 года назад +7

    This "Game Changer" would leave me CHANGELESS! 😳

  • @Maskltl
    @Maskltl 3 года назад +3

    I bought one of the early EFDETLA’s (Cell Type 18650 Lithium Ion). Cons: Life Span = only 60% after 800 charge cycles. Reading right from the manual it claims 1800W (Surge 3300W); however I connected a 1500W ceramic heater and the EFDELTA would trip (using it for this heater was one of the reasons I purchased it). Pros: it does charge quickly from solar panels (another big reason I bought it); I tested this with (4) 120W foldable solar panels I bought for it. Compared to a generator it is very quiet. And other pros mentioned in the video. So I was disappointed it did not meet all the specs they claimed, I kept it because of the charge time and being able to charge and run devices at the same time (note: it will trip on over temperature if load is too much; which is a good thing, so strongly recommend keeping out of sun for best performance). I would also ask if batteries are replaceable. Mine is not, but maybe they’ve made this improvement.

    • @MySonsMother
      @MySonsMother 3 года назад

      No, they aren’t replaceable, but this is LiFePO and has 6500 until 60%.

    • @josephdebes3060
      @josephdebes3060 2 года назад +1

      My July 2021 Delta now has 80% after 800 charge cycles in their new manuals. I use it as a continuous back up for my 10+ year old freezer and I standard side by side home fridge. Have not tried large wattage heater, but even if it runs, the battery would be depleted in about 1 hour (probably much longer with a PRO model). For heat and longer cooking, I would probably have a propane /butane camp stove and a propane camping heater like “Mr Heater” with an automatic cut off oxygen sensor for indoor use. High wattage heat producing appliances eat up solar battery power VERY quickly. Good to have an alternative source and leave the solar for freezers/fridges/electronic charging/ medical equipment (test that first)/ and maybe some lights, although you can get multiple self charging solar lights and not use precious central home battery power

  • @ewalker1057
    @ewalker1057 2 года назад +5

    Goes well with the current move to solar power. Perfect for minimalist lifestyle vehicles. Many do not want to use gas powered devices. It's more than a generator.

  • @vanlifeinthecity9798
    @vanlifeinthecity9798 3 года назад +2

    I have one already. Everything said here is 100% accurate. I use mine every day as a power source for my van.

  • @Snowmirage6453
    @Snowmirage6453 3 года назад +14

    This is very interesting. I've wanted to get something similar, and with all these feature I could likely easily use it on a large boat I plan to restore at some point as well.

  • @kiotipass
    @kiotipass 3 года назад +1

    Won, Groovy, Socko .... My RV gas generator quite working so Now I can get one of these and be able to run my RV Air Conditioner all night and probably all week. So Cool!

  • @tubemember21
    @tubemember21 3 года назад +11

    For those interested, right now the single unit base version at 2016Wh with 2,400 running watts and 5,000 surge watts will cost $1700.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +1

      Yes good deals on them still at the official site here: bit.ly/3kmBslK

    • @davefink2326
      @davefink2326 3 года назад +1

      When it’s 1500w @ $1000, it’s mine

  • @-Galavanta-
    @-Galavanta- 3 года назад +2

    My Ford F150 has a built in generator that can output 7200W and 240v 🙂 Its pretty cool.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +1

      They have done big things with that truck! I am excited to see the lightning too when it comes out.

    • @-Galavanta-
      @-Galavanta- 3 года назад

      @@SilverCymbal For sure, this is my 3rd Hybrid vehicle, don't think I will ever buy a pure ICE vehicle again.

  • @spootnewton7121
    @spootnewton7121 2 года назад +526

    Come on... calling these battery STORAGE devices "generators" is like calling a gas can a petroleum refinery.

    • @cablenetworksystems
      @cablenetworksystems 2 года назад +24

      yeah.. confusing people, during cyclone/bad weather/ no power for days how it will survive?

    • @SilentRage01
      @SilentRage01 2 года назад +32

      Using electricity to backup electricity 🤔

    • @jschreiber6461
      @jschreiber6461 2 года назад +12

      Agreed. The term generator should be reserved for systems that generate continuously for months or years and only stop for maintenance eg hydro dam, Nuclear. All the rest that need refuelling after a few hours are emergency PSUs, sized on the KWh between refuelling. From tiny battery PSU with 4KWh like this to a Yamaha diesel PSU 1000KWh. Only that type of naming standard would quickly reveal how small these are despite their weight. The small battery ones are however very efficient, 90%, vs engine based ones at best, 40%.

    • @Googalite
      @Googalite 2 года назад +22

      When my family's lives are on the line the first thing I want to do is pull out my CHINESE made battery to keep my refrigerators and furnace running. Give me a break!

    • @cdjonesus
      @cdjonesus 2 года назад +26

      This is an additional "Power Supply". It does not generate electricity. When you're power supply has drained, you're out of power. Period. Charge it up again? Honda 2000i generator with fuel, Solar if the sun is out?? What type of real generator are you going to use to charge the "Generator You have been waiting for". Maybe the title should read, a "Electric Storage Device You Have Been Waiting For". False advertising, and very misleading.

  • @BangkokZed
    @BangkokZed 2 года назад +1

    Sold on HSN and QVC, when I'm looking for high quality no-gimmicks stuff that's where I'm shopping ;-)

  • @LoneStarPrepping
    @LoneStarPrepping 3 года назад +4

    Good review! I just ordered my pro and extra battery. If anyone wants to learn how to figure out what you can run on any portable power station and for how long you can run it, I made a video series for you.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +1

      Very cool. I think you will really be amazed by this setup. I have worked with dozens of gas and battery unit and this is over the top and it actually worked! Many companies promise stuff that they can't deliver, this was just the opposite, I had 0 problems.

    • @fajardiniarikamil2712
      @fajardiniarikamil2712 3 года назад

      I wash my loundry manually, almost never turn on my tv, only used my laptop for heavy works, never mind sleep with all light off (inside house) Imagine how long this will last with me in single charge, but i have 2 refrigerator and one rice cooker for my restaurant ,is two of these enough? If power runs out? Can i run my house/my small business with this and how long?

    • @LoneStarPrepping
      @LoneStarPrepping 3 года назад

      @@fajardiniarikamil2712 Thats why I made the following vid series.. ruclips.net/video/yoPLzOlUez0/видео.html

  • @alanjm1234
    @alanjm1234 2 года назад +57

    Looks useful, but it's not a generator. It's a battery and an inverter.

    • @Forbes123
      @Forbes123 2 года назад +6

      True, and it's also an advertisement.

    • @jean-paulvanewijk1810
      @jean-paulvanewijk1810 2 года назад +5

      Well, a generator converts chemical energy stored in gasoline into electricity. This thing converts chemical energy stored in a battery into electricity. That makes it an electricity generator in my book. The only thing is: you need electricity to fill it back up, you can't refill it with chemical energy directly, like a gasoline powered generator. And yes, it's an ad.

    • @RobNMelbourne
      @RobNMelbourne 2 года назад

      @@jean-paulvanewijk1810 You need to study physics and do some research. A battery's chemical cells do not 'generate' electricity, they store it. That is why batteries and this Ecoflow have to be recharged. Your car battery does not generate electricity, it gets it from the rotor in the generator run by the belt coming off the engine shaft.

    • @jean-paulvanewijk1810
      @jean-paulvanewijk1810 2 года назад +1

      @@RobNMelbourne A gas generator doesn't generate energy either. It converts existing chemical energy to electricity.

  • @White000Crow
    @White000Crow 3 года назад +6

    Thing about a generator is that it generates power. I can nearly throw together an 800w @ 12v battery bank for the same cost as one of these.

    • @jjoncm1
      @jjoncm1 3 года назад

      That’s a small fraction of the output of one of these though?

    • @White000Crow
      @White000Crow 3 года назад

      @@jjoncm1 9600 watts for mine vs 3600 watts for there’s. It requires 2 Deltas for 7200 watts which would bring my setup to more than 18000 watts.

    • @Suge212
      @Suge212 3 года назад

      @@jjoncm1 - 800w @ 12v = 800x12 = 9600 watts x 2 = 19200 watts.

    • @jjoncm1
      @jjoncm1 3 года назад

      @@White000Crow okay you said 800w at 12v, think you got some of the units mixed up so was confused.

    • @bennyhill6161
      @bennyhill6161 2 года назад

      @@jjoncm1
      Fact of the matter is, is that you are Wrong & always have been your entire life, & he is Right.

  • @ashmorejoseph
    @ashmorejoseph 2 года назад

    We ordered a Ecoflow Delta Pro off Kick starter. It arrived and had a
    battery fault. Sent it back, next one arrived and works Yay!

  • @WhiteFox011
    @WhiteFox011 2 года назад +66

    Over all, this was a pretty good review of these products, but!, other than showing the length of run times with the various loads, you did NOT spend much time discussing the RUN TIMES with the various loads, true it was shown on the displays, but you could have improved the review greatly if you would have pointed out the run times, some of which were not very long at all.

    • @Googalite
      @Googalite 2 года назад +11

      Showing this battery running a dryer, is ridiculous, even a gas dryer will kill this battery quickly. This device could be useful, but you'd have to be delusional to count on it for emergency situations. Spend the money on a gas generator and a gas can.

    • @n2rj
      @n2rj 2 года назад +22

      I have a test unit and extra battery and I do laundry all day long with a gas dryer. I do have 1000W of solar connected though. Good luck lining up at a gas station after a hurricane.

    • @Ilikeit616
      @Ilikeit616 2 года назад +5

      You are so right Mr. Newkirk ....along with how long does it take to charge full ....and if the electric is still out now what ? ....pull out the gas generator and charge your new purchase each day ......?????
      It would be good for lights and coffee maker for a long weekend camping maybe a small portable refrig for your beer .......will not disturb anyone that wants peace and quite
      Would rather buy a Tesla battery for your house ....last longer

    • @ronking2271
      @ronking2271 2 года назад +6

      @@n2rj The point is to go off grid. You are still depending on natural gas or propane.

    • @jessestrange1646
      @jessestrange1646 2 года назад +5

      These things likely won't run your average refrigerator overnight. No one is talking about average run times for the most commonly used appliances.

  • @Mandorla12
    @Mandorla12 3 года назад +1

    Daughter bought two of these to power her home and her Tesla over in Hawaii. No shortage of sun, can't say that about fuel when SHTF. They ship to the islands and say it will be there in October. I hope nothing happens between now and then.

  • @markbielawski
    @markbielawski 3 года назад +14

    Great video and great tech from EcoFlow, but YIKES even the discounted prices make this cost-prohibitive for most folk. Home backup for > $4,000-$5,000 compared to a gas generator at < $1,000... This tech is amazing, but I hope the prices come down fast.

    • @jonruprecht4099
      @jonruprecht4099 3 года назад +1

      I feel like most shtf scenarios means no gas. This is way out of my budget, but dang it I want one!

    • @nullinterface2077
      @nullinterface2077 3 года назад +4

      @@jonruprecht4099 If you're into disaster prep and already have the elbow room for a gas generator, it's not difficult to keep 5-10 gallons of stabilized fuel on hand at all times. You should be able to keep the fuel reasonably fresh through routine generator operation (running the thing monthly under load is generally recommended) or just consume it in a vehicle.

    • @johnnysweekends
      @johnnysweekends 3 года назад +3

      This is where having a dual fuel generator is good to have. Propane lasts a long time

    • @jonruprecht4099
      @jonruprecht4099 3 года назад

      @@nullinterface2077 yeah I hear ya. I always think of shtf where you may need to run the thing for 6 months or something.

    • @tangoseal1
      @tangoseal1 3 года назад +3

      No this tech is NOT amazing. Its a fancy battery that when it runs out its done for until you have the grid or a huge solar array and hopefully sunny days to recharge it. Nothing in any of our modern technology can hold a candle stick to an actual petrol powered generator that can run and run and run and run as long as it has a fuel supply and generate gargantuan amounts more power than these batteries that are far overpriced can ever supply. These are not generators, they are not generating anything. They are storage batteries that discharge quickly without a backend support to keep solar or grid energy feeding all the time. Your assessment of a home fuel powered generator, a true generator, is realistic and they are functionally dependable unlike these one shot run battery banks. Remember that when storm systems are strong enough to take your grid power, they usually darken the skies, making solar useless, sometimes for days on end. Better learn to really, and I mean really trickle drain that thing with minimal crap hooked to it if you want days of power. Good luck! I'll stick to my little 300wh solar bank for camping and my real generator for grid down stuff. I guess the only thing that is viable option to a gas generator is a whole house solar array, like a Tesla system with 2 or 3 powerwalls, and enough panels to collect even overcast, rain or shine light.

  • @tomjones4835
    @tomjones4835 2 года назад +1

    Sure hope it’s a sunny day when you are in need of your generator

  • @jagergerg9771
    @jagergerg9771 3 года назад +35

    Very impressive but expensive as well

    • @MySonsMother
      @MySonsMother 3 года назад

      Retail is much more expensive. Glad I ordered mine on Kickstarter.

    • @mannyechaluce3814
      @mannyechaluce3814 3 года назад +7

      cheaper with a gas generator

    • @tr1bes
      @tr1bes 3 года назад +3

      I think it's best just to get solar generator, panel and battery install to home. You get government incentives and low electricity bill to no bill. Plus the fact that it will raise home value up.
      All of these generator are getting up there in prices. Just get a portable one for camping and outdoor activity (500 watts to 1500 watts).

    • @NESDwayne
      @NESDwayne 3 года назад +8

      Yeah really. 4k is way too much. Forget this thing.

    • @neoasura
      @neoasura 2 года назад +1

      @@NESDwayne Jesus 4k? I can buy an awesome gas generator for that.

  • @derrickwatkins2431
    @derrickwatkins2431 2 года назад +1

    Game changer. Here no oil or gas. More power. Wow I got to get this..

  • @dutchfox4633
    @dutchfox4633 3 года назад +19

    So the 240v only works if you have 2 units? That really sucks. Someone must have a lot of spare cash to buy two units when you can buy a gas generator for one tenth the price and it run indefinitely with some fuel.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +8

      It would be great if all of these cost less but you have some advantages you don't with gas. With gas you always have to put the 240v outlet outside, that gets expensive for install. You really need the runtime of two units for bigger 240v stuff. With it inside the house the outlet can be placed next to the panel. there is no maintenance, no noise, no one knows you have a generator in a crisis. Not saying it's cheap but it has some benefits.

    • @Zomby_Woof
      @Zomby_Woof 3 года назад +5

      @@SilverCymbal It's still just a ups.
      Without a generator, solar or somerhimg to back it up, its a paperweight in a matter of hours.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +4

      @@Zomby_Woof So a gas generator doesn't become a paperweight? Both need something else to provide elecricity but the difference with this one is it doesnt waste a watt idling like gas does

    • @Zomby_Woof
      @Zomby_Woof 3 года назад +6

      @@SilverCymbal No, a gas generator dors not become a paperweight because you can easily refuel it.
      A 400w panel is not going to produce anything close to 400w reliably - maybe 200w if you have good exposure
      Arr you going to limit your consumption to 200w?
      You'd have to if you want to use it for an extended outage.
      For the cost of this ups I could get a generator installed and plumbed to lng.
      The cost/capacity equation makes no sense at all.

    • @justaworkeryup636
      @justaworkeryup636 3 года назад +2

      Yes I agree. This seems like a good battery backup for a generator. It is not a generator as it does not produce its own power. A neat idea but no use during anything longer then a couple hour down time

  • @alingram5541
    @alingram5541 3 года назад +113

    It doesn't generate anything, it's a rechargeable battery and inverter.

    • @demagab
      @demagab 3 года назад +11

      Actually... Batteries convert chemical energy to electrical energy and gas generators do kind of the same. But I get your point, it shouldn't be called a generator

    • @unclejake1476
      @unclejake1476 3 года назад +8

      It's only a generator with the solar panels hooked up.

    • @brianpreston8483
      @brianpreston8483 3 года назад +7

      @@demagab so what you are saying is...It doesn't generate anything, it's a rechargeable battery and inverter.

    • @terjeoseberg990
      @terjeoseberg990 3 года назад

      What would you call it if it has a hydrogen fuel cell? What if there was a fuel cell that used gasoline instead of hydrogen?
      They’re calling it a generator because it can replace a generator. The only difference is how you fill it up. Wires instead of a hose.

    • @brianpreston8483
      @brianpreston8483 3 года назад

      @@terjeoseberg990 and how would gas or hydrogen be converted to electric?

  • @chuxtuff
    @chuxtuff 3 года назад +73

    While I love technology, especially regarding home backup generator situations, solar panels, solar hot water systems, micro hydro generation, etc etc my first thoughts on this is the price. BOTH of the unit and the cost of the electricity it's putting out. I'm sure someone will put together a graph that shows and compares TOTAL COSTS of this unit versus a more conventional diesel or propane/natural gas powered generation and carry those figures right out to a final cost. BUT right now conventional diesel or propane/nat gas would have the price advantage in a home backup generation situation. Plus I want to know how long these things will last...how many cycles can one expect out of using the power and then recharging the unit IF I'M SPENDING THAT KIND OF MONEY!! That diesel generator if it's taken care of and (with a little luck) will last for decades. So those costs are well known today, where the true costs of this brand new technology are "guesstimated" and aren't yet known. Though it IS cool...

    • @N8TheSnake
      @N8TheSnake 3 года назад +16

      Lithium Ion battery cycles given a certain chemistry have well known quantities of discharge cycles at this point. None of this information is new. That generally runs around 4000 cycles before the battery becomes somewhat degraded.
      Yes you're paying more than a typical gas generator, but you're also gaining capabilities. Battery Inverter generators efficiently store all generated power, gas generators end up wasting most of the power produced. Gas generators only work if fuel is available, battery inverter chargers with connected solar work anytime the sun is available. Battery Inverter chargers provide clean, usable power for electronics. Most gas generators do not and will eventually ruin electrical motors.
      My ideal scenario as a Floridian is having both on hand. I have all the benefits of each with very few disadvantages.

    • @CurtisBarros
      @CurtisBarros 3 года назад +6

      They must have a hydrogen generator by now?

    • @derek723
      @derek723 3 года назад +14

      Extremely skeptical of these. No where does it mention run time on their website, and I also didn't hear run time stats mentioned in this video

    • @r2db
      @r2db 3 года назад +5

      @@koreyb You are also losing a lot of capabilities compared to an actual generator. If you need to run this unit at full capacity you get less than one hour of runtime. A Honda generator with a full tank of gas costs about the same as these units but will run at full capacity for many hours.

    • @churblefurbles
      @churblefurbles 3 года назад +2

      @@derek723 yea basically to replace a gallon of gas you'd have to spend car money on a stack of these. energy density of fossil fuels is just that extreme vs battery.

  • @MelloBlend
    @MelloBlend 2 года назад +1

    This is the perfect solution for our storm shelter....

  • @churblefurbles
    @churblefurbles 3 года назад +45

    problem as ever, a gallon of gas has a crazy amount of watt hours vs this.

    • @jjoncm1
      @jjoncm1 3 года назад +6

      But requires fuel (hard to get in a natural disaster situation or power loss), is noisy, toxic fumes. Still though this is a much higher cost so it’s definitely a trade off.

    • @KeeperOfTheSevenKeys.
      @KeeperOfTheSevenKeys. 3 года назад +4

      Yeah, it was looking surprisingly good for my expectations of a battery unit...until he mentioned the 2.7 hour charge time on a 110v outlet lol. It's only 3.6KWh so yeah you get twice the power output of a generator and can link them up, but you burn through that juice quick and then... you need to plug in again.
      Now sure if you're not using powerhog utilities you can use that for a weekend of camping or something, but as a backup for your house? Ford's upcoming F-150 EV is a much more practical backup battery pack for your house at well over 30x that size.
      On the topic of this battery vs a "generator" you can however, provided you currently have sun, charge it via the solar panels which is certainly more free than acquiring extra gas during an emergency, but won't be fast and may not be practical in some circumstances. I can certainly see this being viable for a lot of applications if it was a bit larger but I wouldn't bet on it in a disaster situation unless you can scale a lot of them with a lot of solar panels and that isn't the most realistic bet let alone cost efficiency.

    • @iamlove5325
      @iamlove5325 3 года назад +2

      @Dindunuffin' ooo You can get solar panels to charge it no problem. Did you not watch the whole video?

    • @undefinednull5749
      @undefinednull5749 3 года назад

      How many?

    • @looptheloopish
      @looptheloopish 3 года назад +1

      @Cr****92 A generator converts mechanical energy into electrical power. That thing is just a container with a battery.

  • @Googalite
    @Googalite 2 года назад +1

    Right, I frequently run my pressure washer when the power is out. Whenever there is an emergency I get the urge to wash my car. And I can't do it without a pressure washer running off a battery.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  2 года назад

      Most people are at BEST setup for a power outage that might last 24 hours, few can store enough gas or keep it ready. That's the problem.

    • @Cenlalowell
      @Cenlalowell 2 года назад

      Propane or natural gas is the solution

  • @josephmalinowski6817
    @josephmalinowski6817 3 года назад +4

    Like the fact that you can connect multiple units together so you don't have to spend a lot of money at once

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад

      I agree, and some companies do that and outdate the units so fast they don't give you a chance. l appreciate Ecoflow has been a stand up company, still selling their original line years later, I fully expect they will do the same with their new Pro line, so you truly can buy batteries 2 years from now

  • @EliteTreats
    @EliteTreats 2 года назад

    This would be PERFECT for camper van and smaller motor/camper homes

  • @johnree6106
    @johnree6106 3 года назад +9

    Got admit you're reviews are very professional and if I had the money this is one I would buy just because you did such a great review.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад

      Thank you, that is very nice of you to say

  • @Pk3_Garage
    @Pk3_Garage 2 года назад

    Got a great deal on one, at Costco for $2899.00, with free shipping. We already have a Predator 9000/7250 watts, Tri-fuel generator, that runs off our homes NG. We bought this as a backup to our generator. We have two manual transfer switches, to backup our entire house. I installed two additional inlets, in the house, so the Delta Pro can stay connected to them, to be ready to use, at the press of a button. I installed two changeover switches, so we can switch between generator and battery power. (Works great)
    Now my wife, and I, can restore power to our house in a few minutes. This allows me the time to set up our generator later. If, the power goes out at night, I don't have to get out of my PJ's to restore power. Also, saves on fuel. Well worth the money in my book.

  • @danburch9989
    @danburch9989 2 года назад +6

    The term "generator" is loosely applied here.
    Battery power is expensive. These run $3600 each. For 240v, you'll neet two. The biggest advantage of these is they are portable, quiet and almost maintenance free. A disadvantage is limited run time with extended power outages unless you have expensive solar panels ($400 per 160watts). A fixed base 24kw standby gas generator can be had for about $6000 but requires regular maintenance. It's anyone's call. If I were going to power my home, I'd go with a gas generator. If I had to evacuate, battery powered sources might be an advantage.

    • @joebuck4496
      @joebuck4496 2 года назад

      Yeah it’s only realistically a generator in the situation of grabbing a few extension cords and camping out in one room, and no heating or cooling. Bluetti AC300 is getting pretty close to an actual backup generator with the ability to solar charge at 2400 watts, and about 12,000Wh of battery minus efficiency.

    • @RobNMelbourne
      @RobNMelbourne 2 года назад

      @@joebuck4496 It's not a generator at all. It has to be recharged by an external source so is really just a battery bank.

    • @joebuck4496
      @joebuck4496 2 года назад

      @@RobNMelbourne I always just assume it to also include panels. Although I usually use them just as power stations I did buy a lot of portable panels just in case.

  • @jdenino6022
    @jdenino6022 2 года назад

    I have a Generac Generator which runs on natural gas. Last power outage it powered my central air conditioning unit and my pool filter and my entire house with 3 refrigerators for about 3 days with no issues. I did raise the thermostat up to about 72 degrees while the generator was running so it would not get overtaxed.

    • @jdenino6022
      @jdenino6022 2 года назад

      A generac will also run my natural gas furnace if we have a power outage when it’s cold. We also have sump pumps that depends on having power during rain storms. The generac also works during a blizzard or a hurricane.

  • @dtrout
    @dtrout 2 года назад +3

    I really like this unit as a potential way to power my fishing cabin and potentially being able to power the window air conditioner and the mini refrigerator ..... along with a few lights. Not sure if solar panels would keep the batteries topped off though, especially in winter. The portable panels are good for mobility but I would prefer fixed panels that can live outdoors for home use. Either that or have one of these and a small gas generator that could charge the Batteries and then shut down to conserve fuel. In extended power outages, fuel can be difficult to find .... after a major storm for example. I feel like a decent size propane tank and propane generator and solar and the Ecoflow Pro might be able to keep essential things working for a long time. Is it possible to expand the battery storage with a couple external Lithium phosphate batteries similar to Battle Born for example? Inergy has the expansion option but not the phosphate chemistry that offers several thousand charge cycles. I would prefer a drop in storage area so that batteries could be replaced and also expanded. It’s difficult to know if a built in unit is worth the price .... or if the portable units are reliable and robust enough to keep food from spoiling and keep the air conditioner running...... this one looks like it might work if there was a fuel based mini generator also on hand to bump the charge back up to approximately 80 pct in the night.

  • @Tore_Lund
    @Tore_Lund 3 года назад +1

    93% efficiency! That's impressive electronics, from AC to DC to battery to inverter AC output! Also smiled when you pulled out the oscilloscope. Too many brochure experts rewieving battery generators on RUclips.

    • @paulk2022
      @paulk2022 2 года назад +1

      I have two of the Kickstarter units and I am seeing 88% and 90% efficiency using the AC output.

  • @406Steven
    @406Steven 3 года назад +25

    As many sales as I've been seeing on the old Delta I was hoping they had something like this up their sleeves. Lots of good new features in this unit and I love the 30 amp RV connector, this could be a legitimate replacement for my 2KW gas generator for my camper (already has solar on it as well) as well as a useful home backup supply.

    • @Bizzare77777
      @Bizzare77777 3 года назад

      Wow, A gas generator with solar capabilities?? What brand and model is it??

    • @406Steven
      @406Steven 3 года назад +2

      @@Bizzare77777 nah, the camper has solar already. With the price of the new units I went ahead with the regular Delta and it's working out well.

    • @james7bouchard
      @james7bouchard 2 года назад

      @Timothy TwoTwoThree if it's solar charged, it's a generator with UPS capabilities

  • @graemeneale9311
    @graemeneale9311 Год назад +1

    This presentation is the finest one out there by a large margin and some of the others are good.

  • @Jasonoid
    @Jasonoid 3 года назад +5

    @ 6:34 Silver Cymbal just rolls three of these right into camera shot....now that's a bit a money!

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +2

      True, but it's great that even if you just buy one you still get the app, features and you can add to it later. They have proven to keep a product around for a while. Other companies can't get it right and keep changing platforms over and over leaving customers behind.

    • @Jasonoid
      @Jasonoid 3 года назад +3

      @@SilverCymbal Looks like EcoFlow really put some thought into these batteries. With features like a house integration panel and a smart sun-tracking solar panel mount their thinking long term. Let us know if you get those add ons in the future to test. I hope this competition from ECO Flow brings other companies to this level! (especially Jackery....being left in the dust).

  • @MrDwightsimon
    @MrDwightsimon 2 года назад +2

    I love how you parked your gas guzzling SUV at the charge station all while taking up 2 spots 🤣
    Bravo, sir 👌

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  2 года назад

      Typical Masshole at work, as they call us. That SUV though was a work vehicle and is long gone.

    • @MrDwightsimon
      @MrDwightsimon 2 года назад +1

      @@SilverCymbal That's ok, I actually approve of your actions! I'm going to buy an Ecoflow just for the pleasure of trolling EV drivers 🤣🤣🤣

  • @TCreatorO
    @TCreatorO 2 года назад +6

    Thats not a generator, its just a battery backup.
    But I like that battery backup, although its probably expensive, usually lithium battery backups, cost over 1$ per watt, so 7200w id assume they cost around $7500 without solar panels, not a cheap option compared to generators

    • @ifarted6422
      @ifarted6422 2 года назад +1

      Just because it's a battery doesn't mean it's not a generator..and it charges itself with solar panels.. quit hatin.. this thing would be awesome for camping and not having to smell carbon monoxide while you're doing it...PSH

  • @ardalla535
    @ardalla535 2 года назад +2

    Run times WERE given as 3600 watt hours. A hundred watt light bulb runs for 36 hours. A 600 watt appliance runs for 6 hours.

  • @terjeoseberg990
    @terjeoseberg990 3 года назад +3

    I’d like to use one of these in parallel with a gas generator. The gas generator should start up automatically and run at the most efficient RPM and recharge the battery unit when it’s low, and I should be able to program what times the generator is allowed to run so it won’t start up in the middle of the night.

    • @josephdebes3060
      @josephdebes3060 2 года назад

      Evoflow is coming out with a top up gas generator that can be set for auto on (say when the batteries have dropped to 20%) and the auto off (say when batteries are 50-80% charged : your choice by software) and their generator can be used as a regular generator if you chose, but it only runs for a few hours. However that model is still in Kickstarter mode at the moment as they are rolling out the Delta Pro and putting the standard Delta on sale, so you can’t buy it outright now. Another downside of the generator is that to charge the Pro, it will take up one of the extra battery plugs in the back, so you could only get 1 external extender battery connected at any given time. Also reviewers are clamoring for a propane dual fuel version of the generator, since propane stores much longer than gas and you don’t have to keep adding stabilizer like you do with stored gasoline. Hope Ecoflow is listening!

  • @rrad8106
    @rrad8106 Год назад

    You sold us! (well, you and several RUclipsrs) We ordered the Ecoflow Delta PRO as our home battery backup. Ordered the secondary battery for the unit, too! Hit the October sale for the units!

  • @iridium130m
    @iridium130m 3 года назад +4

    So very cool. The safety of the LiFe batteries is a huge plus. Now I’m curious if I could feed one of these from my Jeep 4xe or Bolt EV for a super extended runtime.

    • @josephdebes3060
      @josephdebes3060 2 года назад

      Probably. As an example during super storm Sandy one homeowner connected his Prius battery to a 1000 watt inverter and ran his home ( most of it) by keeping the Prius engine running (which would only come on when the hybrid battery went below 20%). He ran it for 3 days that way on 3 gallons of gas used, not the 4-5 gallons per DAY of most gas generators

  • @alexmaclean1
    @alexmaclean1 2 года назад +2

    Cool product, it would have been useful last night for my 14 hour power outage just to run some lights and the refrigerator. I'm honestly impressed but at 3600 USD oof. This thing has the output of a $500ish gas generator. Nice that it can be run in the house, it has a lot of positive aspects but man that's a lot of money.
    You can't count on charging either, in any bad outage, either the charging stations will be off line or the lines will be as long as they are the day before a Florida hurricane. But with gasoline generators you could have weeks of run time stored in your garage. Gas lines tend to only be a problem for people that only think 8 hours ahead most of the time baring some incredible disaster like Katrina that knocks things out for ages.

    • @Pk3_Garage
      @Pk3_Garage 2 года назад +2

      You bring up some good points. You really need both, gas generator and Power Station, to work together. We have both and where one has a weakness, the other has a strength.

  • @15Kilo
    @15Kilo 3 года назад +14

    Nice for the fridge so your food doesn’t good bad with long periods of a power outage

    • @BryanRink
      @BryanRink 3 года назад +1

      This thing would only power my fridge about half a day. I've had multi day outages at my location so I think a generator is a better option for me.

  • @vanlifeinthecity9798
    @vanlifeinthecity9798 3 года назад

    Ecoflow offers a smart generator also that works in conjunction with this unit. It comes on automatic when the levels drop down to a level you choose. It also has push button start or pull start. There is also a wind turbine in the works.

  • @pressplay8277
    @pressplay8277 3 года назад +7

    This is the first thing I’m buying when I get a house

  • @BRONXDEVILDOG
    @BRONXDEVILDOG 2 года назад

    Way better than the Inergy Apex I have. Thing stopped working and I barely ever used it. Worst part is that Inergy refused to fix it bc it was past the warranty period. Mind you, I barely used it.

  • @turbo-bike7999
    @turbo-bike7999 3 года назад +3

    Soooooooo you have to charge these correct? Wouldn’t that make them storage devices? The cost? Until they cost much less than a true generator (a device with a rotating armature) they aren’t going to really catch on. A 3500 watt device will only support about half that before requiring a recharge and that power for recharging has to come from somewhere.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +1

      Don't you add gas to a traditional generator, it's not self powering. This one can be with solar panels, run forever and never leave the house

    • @DIYMikeT
      @DIYMikeT 3 года назад +1

      @@SilverCymbal The analogy is not right, what are adding to the Ecoflow to Recharge it. The power is coming from some kind of Generator right. Gas is the power, Solar is the power. The Ecoflow is Big battery with inverter(120VAC, 240 Volts AC. The only way this product becomes a portable device is by using Photovoltaic Panels or Gas Generator like the Honda Generator. I hope you understand that.

    • @DIYMikeT
      @DIYMikeT 3 года назад

      Your concern is valid, without a way of recharging the product its a paperweight. it will not recharge itself. Comparing this power station( , battery pack with inverter) to actual Electric generator is kind of ridiculous. its only portable with solar(PV) and gas generator.
      While it probably has enough, in term of wattage to last long time before recharge(depends on what is being attached to it), The Honda generator using gasoline which is very dense in power, compared to battery storage, will go a lot longer then the ECO, because you can keep refilling the gas tank. YOu can look up a list on line that gives power density of gas compared lithium or what ever this is variant is.
      The comparison should be between Gasoline and batteries(any battery, because they are both power storage units.

  • @peterbateman8018
    @peterbateman8018 3 года назад +1

    These are just a nice inverter/battery package. They will run flat if your running a clothes drier real quick, I’m thinking.
    Very attractive, especially in series, but very expensive too!
    A proper LifePO4 battery bank with a decent inverter would be more practical.

  • @douglasangelflores6796
    @douglasangelflores6796 2 года назад +4

    We need more technology like this that’s efficient. Nice video!

    • @mgoh1984
      @mgoh1984 Год назад

      Would be nice if this was efficient but minerals used to create batteries require great environmental destruction and recycling them is costly as well.

  • @samlee8690
    @samlee8690 3 года назад +1

    RUclips is suggesting commercials now. Nice. Okay, I take that back. This is pretty cool

  • @Mr2greys
    @Mr2greys 3 года назад +23

    Forget the generator where do you get the slidey thing on your circuit board?
    Granted this is bleeding edge but $4k for 240v and 7200W I would still stick with known gas generators

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +4

      Those are interlocks, and you need to get the right one for your circuit panel here is one amzn.to/3eotXqF

    • @NeveRB4
      @NeveRB4 3 года назад

      Thank you

    • @cocoabiscuits
      @cocoabiscuits 3 года назад

      The electricians put that in place when I had the inlet box installed to the house. Pretty cool.

    • @Mr2greys
      @Mr2greys 3 года назад

      @@SilverCymbal I knew it was an interlock (couldn't remember the name though (thanks)) , but that specific one I was curious about

    • @gener.1253
      @gener.1253 3 года назад +1

      For 4k I can buy a 10,000 watt diesel generator and have enough money left over to run it for a year.

  • @markdenenberg9110
    @markdenenberg9110 3 года назад +2

    Not if you want air conditioning and heat. For the cost of several of these units which would be needed to replace a generator, cheaper to buy and fuel the generator.

  • @muskreality
    @muskreality 3 года назад +3

    I never thought this day would come

  • @w.patpeters4643
    @w.patpeters4643 Год назад

    Just got one, extra battery too. Came with 800 watts of folding solar panels. $7600.

  • @adamtee9204
    @adamtee9204 3 года назад +16

    This is one of the best reviews I've ever seen about anything. Great job!

  • @terrydouglas5008
    @terrydouglas5008 3 года назад +3

    I can run a generator for days. Can buy lots of places. A few 5 gallon tanks lasts a long time.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +3

      Don't be so sure, a gas generator drinks gas every second it runs. These can stay connected use nothing when there is no load and instantly supply power when there is. Most people don't realize that a 5000 watt generator uses almost 20 gallons of fuel per day! That's a lot to keep on hand for even 3 days.

    • @terrydouglas5008
      @terrydouglas5008 3 года назад +6

      @@SilverCymbal and your battery will be dead in under 24 hours and need about that long to recharge. Battery's have a use but it's short term and Blueitts are drastically over priced!

    • @brittgayle467
      @brittgayle467 3 года назад

      @@terrydouglas5008 they can recharge while being used…

    • @terrydouglas5008
      @terrydouglas5008 3 года назад +3

      @@brittgayle467 if there's no power they can't. And if you have power why would you use a battery power. Oh I get it your going to use a gas generator to charge your batteries?

    • @brittgayle467
      @brittgayle467 3 года назад

      @@terrydouglas5008 so you mean on a day where there’s no sunlight? Are we assuming that gasoline is always available?

  • @MrSunShine713
    @MrSunShine713 3 года назад +1

    Man, I love this solar generator! If I have the extra money right now I will buy this generator sadly, my money is tight right now.

  • @gordonlowe5405
    @gordonlowe5405 3 года назад +12

    The dryer demo was very impressive. Did you try your air conditioner by any chance? If so, any idea as to how long the 2 units could power it in 90 F degree heat?

    • @geod3589
      @geod3589 2 года назад +4

      Use a clothes line! It uses solar and wind power!

    • @mikeRadamz
      @mikeRadamz Год назад +1

      @@geod3589 And if you hang them out before it rains, you'll have the rinse cycle covered too.😄

  • @retroelectrical
    @retroelectrical 2 года назад +1

    Cool, this looks like a neat little power box I can use camping and when I...(looks up price: $3,500)...uhh, never mind.

  • @LacDole
    @LacDole 3 года назад +3

    It's good for a few hours power outage, but when you are out of power for a week after a hurricane went thru, you are better off with a gas/propane generator.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад

      Do you think so? A 5000 watt gas generator uses 18 gallons of gas per day, so you would need 19 (5) gallon containers of gas. During emergencies you can't even leave your house sometimes, solar might be all you have. This is what happened in TX

    • @KE5WYD
      @KE5WYD 3 года назад

      @@SilverCymbal You don't have to run a gas generator 24/7. I used my generator when we needed it and left it off when we didn't. Used at most 5 gallons of gas. Using solar to recharge it is great so long as you're not putting a heavy load on it. When you recharged with the A/C on it went from 4 hour recharge time to 13 hours. There is no way you would be able to charge it and keep it charged while using it. If you wanted to power you're whole house with power hungry appliances it wouldn't be able to keep up.
      This would be great to take camping if you wanted some power but it would be cheaper to just get a non privative site that has power already. It could be helpful if you were to boondock out on some BLM land

    • @huxleyorwellrand3137
      @huxleyorwellrand3137 3 года назад +1

      @@SilverCymbal what everyone misses here it’s quiet and you can use it inside. In a grid down situation this is exceedingly important. As time passes without the grid, your “necessities” will change. As will the desperation of others. This happens in a short time. Within a week. Especially in urban situations. In an apartment situation, this would be the only choice.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад

      @@huxleyorwellrand3137 They get it, but they don't want to. Or what about people who have had generators stolen at night or the 95% that can't and don't maintain them and they don't start/ If you are a regular viewer I have more gas generator videos than any other channel and even gas prep videos and totally get it. I am baffled that some folks can't accept that there are others out there with different situations that these are beyond perfect for. Some just want to argue I think. I appreciate the support.

  • @STEVEARABIA1
    @STEVEARABIA1 3 года назад

    This puts out 3600 watts for about an hour. A generator will put that out for about 8 hours without filling the tank. This would be ok for camping at night because it’s quiet so you don’t annoy others. Maybe a small off grid cabin with the solar panels if getting gas was a pain.

  • @cheetahprague
    @cheetahprague 2 года назад +3

    So after a hurricane and your power is out for 2 weeks, what exactly will these "Generators" generate? Once the batteries run out, which will be fast, the only thing you will be generating will be moldy food in your fridge.

    • @niiiiiix
      @niiiiiix 2 года назад

      just as like gas may run out, at least these can be recharged by solar

  • @rdefender2685
    @rdefender2685 2 года назад +1

    Solar power for a dryer is the old fashion “clothes line”.

  • @jeremiahcurry4875
    @jeremiahcurry4875 3 года назад +11

    I have the Eccoflow River pro and I am very impressed with it, but it has one big drawback I didn't realize when I bought it. If you are using it while charging from AC (think generator charging it while it is powering something) it won't output a pure sine wave, it just passes through whatever it is getting. I was hoping to use it to clean-up power from a generator. Have you tested this scenario?

    • @Azeminad
      @Azeminad 2 года назад +3

      Thank you for this, that is a big deal to some.

    • @sapientum8
      @sapientum8 2 года назад +1

      Pass-through when connected is a much more natural engineering solution - it removes the battery power output limitation when connected to grid. As an engineer, that's how I would have implemented it as well.

    • @jacobhn2
      @jacobhn2 2 года назад +2

      You need an old 12/24 volt battery charger for a car, now put it in your gas generator and the other end into the ecoflow solar charger input, now you charge and the inveter also supply power.

    • @jameskelly9243
      @jameskelly9243 2 года назад

      @@jacobhn2 excellent idea

  • @GrouchoTM
    @GrouchoTM 3 года назад +1

    I have a smaller ecoflow and have to say I'm quite happy with it! I'm looking to get one like this now!

  • @sociopathmercenary
    @sociopathmercenary 3 года назад +5

    This would be a good solution to pair with a couple of solar panels and a gas generator. Run the gas generator to charge this unit when there's not enough solar available.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +1

      It's funny you say that because they invented a "smart" generator for that exact reason.. It's a small gas unit specifically for charging up when you can't or don't want to use sun. I don't want to gush about it too much since I haven't had it yet but I am excited to get a chance to try it since this is another groundbreaking thing, I believe it actually interfaces with the Pros, so its not just a regular generator.

  • @jayajora
    @jayajora Год назад

    I wish there was a place to go see them, see a demo in person so I can ask questions. I really need something like this but clueless in every aspect

  • @innerjon
    @innerjon 3 года назад +4

    This is the perfect video I’ve been looking for!!! Thank you!!! 🙏🏻

  • @martinamadsen812
    @martinamadsen812 2 года назад

    Well the batteries will go flat long before a generator would run out of fuel, so they are only good for short term use for larger loads, but for low loads they would be very handy where mains or generator power is unavailable for several hours...

  • @Xektt
    @Xektt 3 года назад +3

    Does the Uninterrupted Power Supply (UPS) feature work a single EcoFlow Delta PRO Unit independently? Or does it also require the use of the separate Smart Home Panel?

  • @kenjohnson5498
    @kenjohnson5498 3 года назад +1

    I still like the titan better just because you can add any manufacturers 24v battery to the system without having to buy a whole other unit. If they change that feature i would highly consider this unit. Thanks for the review i learned more about it on your vid over others i watched.

    • @SilverCymbal
      @SilverCymbal  3 года назад +1

      I appreciate the nice words. I want to like Titan but they have never been able to get a unit to try and I have seen posts about endless backorders and worries about their company. Not sure what their future holds but I think they may be going the way of Goal Zero.

  • @noahcanoa
    @noahcanoa 3 года назад +4

    Can you do a comparation between the ecoflow delta Pro and the Bluetty ep500?!?

  • @johannesincalifornia
    @johannesincalifornia 2 года назад

    For extended power outage you want to charge this battery with your gas generator in say 3 hrs once a day. Then this battery with 3600 kWhrs can run your fridge easily 24 hrs, until you re-charge it the next day. Loud generator noise only ~2 hrs a day! But it's a pretty expensive battery, costs almost 10 times as much as a generator.

  • @ITSJUSTBERG2020
    @ITSJUSTBERG2020 2 года назад +3

    I feel like two of these and some solar power to charge them is a must for everyone’s home !!!

  • @kobeawesomegamer1696
    @kobeawesomegamer1696 3 года назад +2

    Eco flow has a new generater

  • @SiDPT15
    @SiDPT15 3 года назад +9

    Average household energy use is 28kw per day. This "generator" only outputs 3kw and even with 3 of these it's still not enough for a day out of power. Not worth it

    • @KineticSymphony
      @KineticSymphony 3 года назад +2

      The vast majority of that power is from dryer, hot water tank and heating. In an emergency, do away with the dryer / hot water tank, and heating from wood stove.

    • @scottdowney4318
      @scottdowney4318 2 года назад

      Maybe it makes people feel cool to have an electric battery,

  • @billywray4524
    @billywray4524 Год назад +2

    i bought 2 eco flos. had issues with both. support is pretty much nonexistent . no phone and never answered emails. if you buy one of these you will be on your own. hope you don't end up with expensive paper weights like i did

  • @retrodog63
    @retrodog63 2 года назад +3

    I'm a big fan of solar generators. Been using them for years. Interesting how this is suddenly a "new thing", or at least implied to be. It's pretty impressive none-the-less.

    • @geod3589
      @geod3589 2 года назад

      Fear mongering in this crazy world these days. Same with all the long term foods. I looked at Patriot foods and solar gens. They both are garbage but play on fear.

    • @whattheschmidt
      @whattheschmidt Год назад

      Not new - just the best to date! Mine arrives shortly. I'm getting it for backup + take with me on trip use. Unfortunately my 2 solar arrays will not be plugging into this (one has microinverters, one is on my garage and way too high voltage) and also cannot be used with the grid down but this is my interim solution and has more value as well than my future plan of hybrid inverter, automatic transfer switch, server rack battery setup.

  • @RVingwithG
    @RVingwithG 2 года назад +2

    YEP, I bought one! ! ! I wish I had gotten the solar too