Nature Power Solar Generator 1800-Watt With Trolley
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Product Description
With an 80Ah battery producing up to 1800 watts of power, the Solar Generator by Nature Power can be used in emergency situations to power small appliances. The generator has six outlets to plug in lights, laptops, and even a mini refrigerator Read More
ozedudeThrough AC it seems to take 12-14 hours to fully recharge. With solar, it will depend on how much solar connected. It is really standard to use a 100 watt solar panel which will recharge it from flat in about 10 hours of full sunlight which would be 2 actual days.
It seems to come with a starter solar panel and then we expand with additional solar panels depending on how quick to recharge the battery. I built something similar using a car battery and an inverter. it wasn't Pure sine inverter technology and it was back when solar was a lot more expensive. It almost makes more sense to use the wind power option to recharge as that would be a lot faster or the AC Recharging function.
"An inverter is needed to charge newer LED televisions, LED light bulbs, and inductive loads like brushless motors."
Huh? I assume this sentence is supposed to be something like: "This unit features a pure sine-wave inverter, which is needed to power newer TVs, LED light bulbs, and inductive loads like brushless motors."
So does this have pure sine wave output? Even the web site has a similar ambiguous sentence about the output.
Also, is it typical to call solar-charged batteries generators?
EDIT1: It says "Output waveform: Pure sine wave" in the specs... missed that the first time I looked.
EDIT2: MD fixed the ambiguous copy... my work here is done *flies away*
SkeletoramaI guess in the same way you use a gasoline generator, but you're switching to solar. The battery is just to ensure it puts out consist power for whatever is plugged in.