jonyjoe101
Adventurer
I been using the enovate mobius, its not a true "solar generator" but the price is too good not to use these. It has the same power output as the goal zero and jackery type of power generators (10.8 volts). So far been using them almost 2 months and have been happy with them. You would have to supply your own inverter, 12 volt receptacle, and also you would have to supply your method to charge them. The connectors use on these are "atx 4pin cpu male to female pc cpu connector" you can find on ebay and amazon.
1 mobius is 26ah, 2 of them and you got 52ah (more power then a goalzero 400 (40ah). I got 12 of them in paralleled for a total of 312ah of real power. I tested one of them at 6 amp charge rate and 12 amp discharge rate. Connected together that increases the charge/discharge but haven't charged beyond 6 amps. But your not limited like the goalzero or jackery.
The only drawback so far I encountered is you need to have a very good method to charge these. My 240 watt panel is not getting it done. For the past 2 weeks my mobius batterybank has been limping along at 8 percent power (about 10 volts) but it still runs my 12 volt fridge(with a boost/buck converter) and my 200 watt inverter. Everyday I just charge barely enough to get me through another night. Next project is a larger solar panel.
You can find these on ebay, some in new condition never been used. I bought the new ones(old stock) 2x 75 dollars. Even the old ones I bought for 2x 65 still had at least 22ah (which was as far as I tested. Total I spent was about 450 dollars for the 12 mobius, you couldnt buy even 1x 40ah goalzero for that price.
You need a cc/cv 12.6 volt charger to charge these, each mobius has its own giant bms internally for over/under voltage protection. The lithium batteries use inside these powerpacks are top of the line panasonic or boston power cells. Nothing cheap about these powerpacks except the price.
As far as charging, these mobius augment my 220ah lifepo4 battery. When the sun is out I use a boost/buck converter set to 12.6 volts/6amps and charge from the lifepo4. I charge at 6 amps because my solar panel is maxing out at 9 amps and I also have to top off the lifepo4. Those who have a lead acid solar system, can use that to charge these.
1 mobius is 26ah, 2 of them and you got 52ah (more power then a goalzero 400 (40ah). I got 12 of them in paralleled for a total of 312ah of real power. I tested one of them at 6 amp charge rate and 12 amp discharge rate. Connected together that increases the charge/discharge but haven't charged beyond 6 amps. But your not limited like the goalzero or jackery.
The only drawback so far I encountered is you need to have a very good method to charge these. My 240 watt panel is not getting it done. For the past 2 weeks my mobius batterybank has been limping along at 8 percent power (about 10 volts) but it still runs my 12 volt fridge(with a boost/buck converter) and my 200 watt inverter. Everyday I just charge barely enough to get me through another night. Next project is a larger solar panel.
You can find these on ebay, some in new condition never been used. I bought the new ones(old stock) 2x 75 dollars. Even the old ones I bought for 2x 65 still had at least 22ah (which was as far as I tested. Total I spent was about 450 dollars for the 12 mobius, you couldnt buy even 1x 40ah goalzero for that price.
You need a cc/cv 12.6 volt charger to charge these, each mobius has its own giant bms internally for over/under voltage protection. The lithium batteries use inside these powerpacks are top of the line panasonic or boston power cells. Nothing cheap about these powerpacks except the price.
As far as charging, these mobius augment my 220ah lifepo4 battery. When the sun is out I use a boost/buck converter set to 12.6 volts/6amps and charge from the lifepo4. I charge at 6 amps because my solar panel is maxing out at 9 amps and I also have to top off the lifepo4. Those who have a lead acid solar system, can use that to charge these.