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VTOMAN Jump 600X 299Wh 600W (1200W Surge) LiFePO4 Portable Power Station $239.99 Shipped @ Vtoman eBay AU

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CBT20

These are a good all-in-one solution if you don't want to muck around with a battery, inverter etc. when going out camping to power appliances/electronics or for use as a UPS, powering CPAP machines and so forth.

Features include a 299Wh capacity with long lasting & durable LiFePO4 cells, 600W output with 1200W surge, pure sine wave, 2x AC AU plugs, 2x DC 5521 (12V/10A) & car socket (12V/10A) output, DC input (12V-30V), AC input, solar input with built in MPPT, 1x USB-C 60W PD, 1x USB-A 18W QC 3.0 fast charging and 2x regular USB-A.

Thanks to Clear for my shameless copy of his earlier deal details

VTOMAN have a mixed reputation (The Jump 1500 is unreliable) but I have this exact model and most reports are good - it is the exact same as the VOLTX E600 https://voltx.com.au/products/voltx-e600-power-station just different brand and colour

Original Coupon Deal

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Comments

  • So this could power a 600W PC + monitor setup for half an hour while camping?

    • +4

      A 600W computer would run for approximately 29.9 minutes on a 299Wh battery, assuming 100% efficiency. If there are inefficiencies (e.g., battery conversion losses), the actual runtime would be slightly shorter.

      • +2

        Correct! Not sure about this exact model, but these things are usually 85%-90% efficient at best.

      • +5

        Your computer also wouldn't draw 600w the whole time, it could be much much less depending on workload.

      • As long as your monitor doesn't require any power…

    • +4

      It is roughly 24Ah so the same capacity as this Kings https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/849165 but with an inverter
      Or a quarter of one of these https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/873361 but with an inverter

      So you would need quite a bit more to get a decent runtime at 600W
      But to run lights and charge everything and run a camping fridge - it's pretty handy

      In the simplest sense Ah = weight. Anything up to 100Ah is pretty portable 200Ah+ and things start getting heavy and harder to lug around
      These are ‎6 Kg so pretty easy

    • +2

      If you're not gaming, sure

    • No. Maybe 90% of 299wh. All batteries are not perfectly efficient when discharging their stored energy

    • +1

      I think an M4 MacMini could last almost a day (~50W), especially on low-power mode (~25W).

      It's actually such a shame you can't power the Mini over USB-C, that would've made it the best portable desktop options.

      • +1

        you need a monitor around 50w

        • You could use a portable monitor, 18" screen would draw around 11-12W at max brightness. Smaller screens can draw far less, I have a 13" OLED portable monitor that only uses 4-5W max.

  • +3

    Can this be charged and used at the same time? Sorry cannot remember the tech term.. was it pass through or something ?

    • +5

      Yep the term is 'pass through' you are right and yes it does

      • +2

        Thank you kind sir!

  • +2

    Beware, I brought it's bigger brother, it's not reliable! Sometimes it stop charging midway on it's own (AC charging), sometimes the battery completely drained for no reason. Get ecoflow, they're costly, but the best

    • +2

      Which did you get? The famously unreliable Flashspeed series? They are well known duds if yes.
      These 600X seem decent enough so far. There is a Facebook group about the good the bad and the ugly with these BTW https://www.facebook.com/login/?next=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.faceb…

    • +2

      Was going to say the same. Can't beat EcoFlow. They also come with 5-years warranty compared to the 2-years (as per the eBay listing).

  • Been looking for one of these. I'm new at this stuff.
    I bought a solar controller from Jaycar and it has Anderson connectors already installed onto it, which was awesome. I started charging an old lead acid battery with my solar panel and it's been working pretty good, but not sure about the "load" end of things so I want to get one of these camping batteries where the inverter is built into it ready to go.
    However this thing doesn't have Anderson connectors for my panel to charge it.
    How do people usually solar charge these things?

    • These also have a MPPT solar controller onboard so you just need to hook up panels and thats it

      • I don't see any input ports for solar cables?

        • Its a barrel connector - there's a picture in the ad with panel

  • +2

    Damnnnn that's a good price. It makes my $199 Jaycar power station look like a POS.

    • that jaycar unit lasted me a couple months then the AC output stopped working so had to return it for a refund as they had no other units in stock!

  • I wonder if this will be enough to run a Dune 75L fridge overnight when not getting power from solar.

    • +1

      It wold run it for days. I bought the Dune 180wh and after 4 nights it still had more than half charge. This fridge used little power

  • Voltx power stations. HODL for voltx to go on sale again.

    • +1

      Just had a look at these - the VoltX E600 looks almost identical but reskinned. Is there really that much of a difference? It's also currently $449 on the VoltX website.

      • +1

        VoltX is a reskinned version of the VTOMAN. Given GOOLOO is the parent company of VTOMAN I'm not surprised that they do OEM/ODM.

  • I have been thinking of getting a portable fridge, this one comes to mind, suits my need.
    https://www.jaycar.com.au/30l-brass-monkey-portable-fridge-f…

    Is this battery going to be overkill? The use case is I need a battery capable of running the fridge / freezer for about 6-8 hours tops when car is off.

  • I have a need for a battery to power a "cricket bowling machine" for my son. It can run off a 12V car battery and comes with a cable with two clips (red and black) for this purpose but The VTOMAN doesn't seem to have anywhere to clip these onto - does anyone know how I can connect the clips to this device? Is there maybe a cigarette lighter that ends in a positive and negative to connect the clips to?

    • +1

      You need to know the load in watts - will be on the unit somewhere. You are probably only going to get 120w at 12v out of the cigarette lighter socket
      The current required may possibly be too high.

      • Thanks mate - apparently it needs 12V 10A 120W - does that make sense (sorry I have no idea when it comes to this stuff!) - I was reading your other comments and thought maybe even this one would do the job: https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/849165 but it also has the same problem - nowhere to attach the clips.

        • +1

          Well you are in luck. Either should work fine with a cigarette plug end. If you change that out you are good to go with specs anyway.
          You could buy one at Jaycar and solder it. Just two wires very easy.

  • Can these jump start flat car batteries?

  • +4

    Do I need this? No
    Do I want this? Yes
    Can I justify buying this? Most likely
    Could I spend $239.99 on something more important? Also yes

    My undiagnosed ADHD is being real spicy at the moment!

    • I'm in the same boat. Don't need it but can think of a handful of time when this would be handy af

  • +1

    Its actually cheaper now as per code BFRI30 ($223.99 Delivered)
    Party is over, looks like it was an error on eBay's end but hopefully a few orders were honoured!

  • +1

    Got mine today, ended up ordering the bundle with the 110W solar panel for $407 (currently $397). Build quality is much better than I expected.

  • Do you guys think it would be OK to leave this outside undercover? I'm thinking about getting one to power my outdoor pump.

    • I would say anything with this much energy and electronics in it is absolutely intolerant of moisture and excess heat..
      I don't think I would do it.

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