- Nov 25, 2012
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AROzJAQNX-M
User AintBigAintClever
I didn't bother paying attention to every detail, but the guy found the battery is actually lighter than it should be for its rating. So, there is a "weight test" for these power packs, and cheap ones have overrated batteries with fillers to make it look more capable than it actually is.
The inverters that come with these things are likely square or modified sine wave.
As far as weights go, any lead acid power pack that is 13 pounds or under is going to have a battery than is less than 17 Ah.
http://www.powerstream.com/Size_SLA.htm
So, if the thing weighs about 22 pounds, there is probably a 18 or 22 Ah battery in there. The heavier ones either come with a single 30 Ah one or two 18 or 22 Ah ones. The professional units better have a quality charger in there thick cables, or else they making some serious bank.
Basically, the merit of these products is that they integrated of bunch of products into one convinient package
Inverter for units that need an AC output
Backup battery, smaller battery to start a car
Air compressor for filling up a tire
Flashlight.
Battery charger for the battery inside.
Cables to connect to battery
The inverter, and light are really just extra frills for profit. The compressor can be handy, but if they put in the same one as that is in $10 Slime or the cheap $7 one from Harbor Freight, then it is more about it having one in a integrated package than having a faster tire inflator. The charger and the battery is what necessitated a purchase of such a device in the first place and if either or both are bad at what they do, the product is a load of garbage.
These smaller lead acid batteries balloon in price once the Ah goes above 22. Even some "professional" packs will only weigh around 22 lbs, so the battery's Ah is not going to be that high, although it might be a proper small "starting battery" with more surface area.
As far as a heavy pack goes, I found the Clore ES6000KE weighs in at 37 lbs, so there is a big battery in there. It also costs around 300 dollars.
The Npower Dominator also weighs 35 lbs, and comes with a 30 Ah battery. http://www.northerntool.com/shop/to...ZDBaSY_qkZVZWvcS6FIHqnMZzQe-oGMTgmhoCHKrw_wcB
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDob_VFrlPk
This is different video, where the guy talks a lot and load tests a bunch of packs, but no teardowns.
User AintBigAintClever
I didn't bother paying attention to every detail, but the guy found the battery is actually lighter than it should be for its rating. So, there is a "weight test" for these power packs, and cheap ones have overrated batteries with fillers to make it look more capable than it actually is.
The inverters that come with these things are likely square or modified sine wave.
As far as weights go, any lead acid power pack that is 13 pounds or under is going to have a battery than is less than 17 Ah.
http://www.powerstream.com/Size_SLA.htm
So, if the thing weighs about 22 pounds, there is probably a 18 or 22 Ah battery in there. The heavier ones either come with a single 30 Ah one or two 18 or 22 Ah ones. The professional units better have a quality charger in there thick cables, or else they making some serious bank.
Basically, the merit of these products is that they integrated of bunch of products into one convinient package
Inverter for units that need an AC output
Backup battery, smaller battery to start a car
Air compressor for filling up a tire
Flashlight.
Battery charger for the battery inside.
Cables to connect to battery
The inverter, and light are really just extra frills for profit. The compressor can be handy, but if they put in the same one as that is in $10 Slime or the cheap $7 one from Harbor Freight, then it is more about it having one in a integrated package than having a faster tire inflator. The charger and the battery is what necessitated a purchase of such a device in the first place and if either or both are bad at what they do, the product is a load of garbage.
These smaller lead acid batteries balloon in price once the Ah goes above 22. Even some "professional" packs will only weigh around 22 lbs, so the battery's Ah is not going to be that high, although it might be a proper small "starting battery" with more surface area.
As far as a heavy pack goes, I found the Clore ES6000KE weighs in at 37 lbs, so there is a big battery in there. It also costs around 300 dollars.
The Npower Dominator also weighs 35 lbs, and comes with a 30 Ah battery. http://www.northerntool.com/shop/to...ZDBaSY_qkZVZWvcS6FIHqnMZzQe-oGMTgmhoCHKrw_wcB
------------------
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDob_VFrlPk
This is different video, where the guy talks a lot and load tests a bunch of packs, but no teardowns.