Recommendations for portable power stations? (for camping, power outages, etc.)
I took a look around and a lot of comments mentioned to get one that uses 'LiFePO4 Batteries', and that seemed like a reasonable requirement.
They're supposed to have a longer life span, be safer, light weight, and better charge/discharge efficiency which is in line with what I'd be looking for.
Some brands/models that I saw recommended:
BLUETTI came up in more recent posts
Ecoflow (specifically the RIVER 2) came up a lot
Anker was suggested a few times, but the comments weren't that detailed
I have very limited experience with this but from what I've seen car batteries are terrible for this. They're not designed to be drained and don't hold up to it well. Deep cycle is the way to go.
I combat this by over sizing my batteries. I have a lead one in a tool box I use for camping and I recharge with a solar panel, It's a standard car battery that for my use lasts 6 hours or so. Normally I use it for a couple hours (between dusk and time to go to bed) to use a laptop, maybe a speaker and an LED light and then I charge it during the day while I go hiking via solar panels.
If you care for them they can last a long time. There's also charge controllers you can install to keep it between 20 and 80% charge (for best life) but that's kind of overkill for my purposes.
Having said that, yes ... deep cycle batteries are a lot better, and even more so are Li Ion and solid state ... but they are also significantly more expensive, and I like to use whatever I have at hand.
Thanks for explaining. I think the people I knew who tried this didn't take any precautions to protect their battery so that would explain why theirs failed so quickly.
This one is a very small 3Ah battery because my friend is using it as a proof of concept. He wants it to power a very small Wi-Fi spectrum analyzer / packet capture device when he goes war driving.
The beauty of Lead acid batteries is that they're very cheap at the cost of additional weight and volume If I used 18650 Lithium Ion cells I could probably get more than twice the battery capacity, but it gets more expensive and more complex (You have to do some math to figure out how to wire the batteries to add up to 12V and calculate how many amps total so you can fuse it correctly)
In the pic you can see that there's already a float charger I've taken out of the case to reduce the volume it takes (I normally encase them in epoxy) and an Inverter I'm going to wire externally for him to test 110 with a battery this small
I still have to cut holes for the USB adapters and float charger port, and I have to shop for a volt meter monitor that fits his needs.