
Solar Charger 25000mAh, Hiluckey Outdoor Portable Power Bank with 4 Solar Panels, Fast Charge External Battery Pack with Dual 2.1A Output USB…
$46.99
Last updated on November 8, 2022 1:42 am Details
$46.99
Rhoda247412 –
sono stato 4 gg a Venezia con la famiglia, Lasciandolo aperto sopra lo zaino. Si ricarica completamente in un paio di giorni, per ricaricarlo chiudere i pannelli e mettere il cavo. Se il telefono è spento, si ricarica prima…un paio di ricariche sembra le faccia. Comodo per viaggi ed escursioni
Me!YAY! –
He usado bancos de energía durante muchos años y recientemente reemplacé 2 que tuve durante aproximadamente 5 años (también comprados en Amazon) pero que habían llegado al final de su vida útil. Mi esposa y yo tenemos 8 baterías externas, por lo que sabemos muy bien cómo usarlas y cuidarlas.
Obtuve tanto este artículo como el Anyzoo Solar Charger 20000mAh, y ambos son completamente inútiles (de hecho, tuve que dar la misma revisión para ambos artículos). Se supone que la carga de esto es de 25000 mAh, lo que debería cargar un iPhone alrededor de 10 veces. En cambio, esto hará 2, cargas y estará muerto (lo mismo que el supuesto otro cargador de 20000 mAh). Después de aproximadamente 1 mes, uno de los puertos de carga dejó de funcionar; desafortunadamente, debido a una agenda muy ocupada y una enfermedad, perdí la ventana de devolución del artículo. ¡Esto fue 2 semanas más de lo que tardó el otro artículo en perder uno de sus puertos!
Lo que realmente me molesta, más allá de las molestias y el costo de comprar algo inútil, es que esto es más basura electrónica. Después de un par de meses, esto solo es bueno para el reciclaje, aún más contaminación para el planeta. El fabricante y el vendedor deberían estar avergonzados, ya que este no es un producto aceptable para vender. Recomiendo encarecidamente optar por un fabricante más establecido; no volveré a cometer el mismo error.
Rhoda247412 –
One of my favorite purchases to date
Amazon Customer –
The solar charging wouldn’t work at all if there’s no power i the PowerBank. The manual claims it solar charging will charge the power and and also any device attached. Fact is solar power bank only charges devices (2 🌟 for that). If you put it in stand alone to charge the powerbank , that never works. The led indicators keep blinking at the same level as they did when you put it out for charging for whatever number of hours or days.
Justin –
It can charge my phone two or three times when it’s fully charged. However, it never charged in the sunlight. I put it in the window under very strong sunlight for a week. Unfortunately, never went up even one power bar. I put it in the strong sunlight for a full day when I was camping. Didn’t charge at all. What’s the point to spend more money to buy this heavier than regular power bank to carry around? Is there anyone get it charged in the sunlight? I bought it because expected to use it when backpack camping for multiple days.
Edward Strout –
Really great charger for emergencies and on the go. 17203 mAh out of the 25000 mAh claim and when it was completely dead I charged it for 5 hours using only the solar panels and it was enough for a 50% boost on my phone which is great for emergencies such as long term power outage.
Rover Rover –
Works like a champ. I was out camping in the mountains for 5 days no electricity. I followed instructions and made sure the unit had a full charge prior to first use. First night my cell phone was down to 10% and my tablet down to 5%. I turned them both off and plugged them both (at the same time) into the solar charger. When I woke up the in the morning they were both at 100% charge. During the day I left the solar charger exposed to the sun. Each night it charged my cell phone and my tablet to 100%. A word of caution…. if the solar charger has LESS battery life than what you’re trying to charge it will suck the power out of the device you’re trying to charge and suck that power into the solar charger. Make sure you have a full charge on the solar charger before trying to charge something else with it.
Edward Strout –
I am a member of a Federal Disaster Response team and as such may find myself deployed to areas that have had power knocked out. I carry high capacity power packs but of course you need power to recharge those. This item was purchased for its solar charging capability.
This is a much bigger and heavier unit than I expected, so it’s not something I will carry in a pocket, but based on my testing I will carry it in my go bag. The attached pictures can give you an idea of the dimensions.
To test the performance I fully charged the unit using a wall plug and then used it to charge my Samsung Galaxy S-7 until the power pack was fully drained. The nutshell report is that I got about 5 full recharges before the power pack was drained.
1st – phone from 7% to full in 1 hr 40 min
2nd – from 3% to full in in 1 hr 46 min
3rd – from 0% to full in 1 hr 45 min
4th – from 1% to full in 1 hr 54 min while using the phone to surf the web
5th – 0% to 45% in 42 minutes at which point the pack was drained.
I then took the depleted pack outside and opened the solar panels to indirect sunlight and connected my depleted phone to it. That took my phone from 0% to 6% in one hour.
I moved the pack into direct sunlight and the phone went from 6% to 13% in one hour.
I then disconnected the phone and left the pack in direct sunlight for an additional 6 hrs and noted that the pack was displaying 1 light of charge capacity, (about 25%). Clearly, charging the pack by solar power alone will take several days to go from empty to full. However, since in the course of a normal work day my phone rarely falls below 50%, I feel comfortable that this unit will give me 9 to 10 recharges before running out of juice. If I set the unit into sunlight during the day and charge my phone in the evening, I imagine that I’ll never be without power.
The caveat…if deployed to a disaster, most of my phone use is accessing disaster related apps a few times per day, using GPS with pre-downloaded maps, and if lucky, phone or text with family and teammates. I might listen to stored music during downtime, but not streaming anything.
My bottom line is that this item will go out the door with me, maybe as soon as this weekend with Hurricane Dorian on the way. I would recommend it to anyone looking for an emergency power pack. It’s way too bulky for a day-to-day carry power source, but if you are expecting or planning to be completely without any electrical power for more than a couple of days, then this may be the way to go.
Justin –
Ok, so I will admit I was pretty upset with a few things when I originally reviewed this product. However, after talking with customer support through e-mail (was kinda expecting it to happen on here but it is ok) I decided to change my review.
I won’t say all that I said in my previous version of my review, but I will say that they have an excellent customer support and truly do care about the customer and doing what is right. She was very kind and helpful to hear me out.
In the end, I gave some ideas and support that is encouraging them to make improvements to this product beyond its current state. So take notice and look towards higher quality stuff. I see them improving it already!
I got a full refund, but I am sincerely thinking of looking into buying the new and improved version. I want to know when it is released because I am excited!
I will change my review to five star when I see improvements made.
Akshay –
Hatten die Powerbank für den Urlaub gekauft. Nach nur 2x benutzen konnten wir die Powerbank bereits nicht mehr über die Solarpanels laden. Absoluter Schrott. Leider war die Rekla Frist bereits abgelaufen.
Amazon Customer –
You CANNOT at all hang this solar charger HORIZONTALLY on backpack as shown in pictures. There’s a tiny loop that sticks out from the corner to which you can hang this product from your backpack but you will need to purchase a connector separately. Very disappointed as manufacturer purposely did this to boost ideal look of product.
Andrew Stoffel –
So I bought this in 2018, a few weeks before my trip abroad. Because I can be quite lazy sometimes, I didn’t charge it all the way before I left (it was on the first light). I had charged my phone and camera on the planeso they were fully charged. I was in Nigeria for two weeks and used this powerbank to charge my phone and camera. I didn’t even open it to charge the bank via solar power (and there’s plenty of sun in Nigeria). My powerbank lasted the entire two weeks, finally running out on the plane ride back. It was totally worth the money. I used my phone and camera for leisure and the power bank was great on only one charge/light. If I had used my phone for work or needed to use my laptop, I would have probably needed it to be fully charged. But again it worked great. It was pretty durable too (surviving a few falls, no cracks).