🌞 Power Up Anywhere with Renogy's Solar Suitcase!
The Renogy 400W Lightweight Portable Solar Suitcase is a compact and durable solar panel designed for outdoor activities. Weighing only 30.2 lbs, it features high-efficiency Grade A+ solar cells, IP67 waterproof protection, and a quick one-minute setup with sturdy kickstands. Ideal for RVs, camping, and off-grid living, it ensures reliable power generation in any weather condition, backed by a 3-year warranty and a 10-year output guarantee.
Brand | Renogy |
Material | Fiberglass |
Product Dimensions | 27.9"L x 3.2"W x 33.7"H |
Item Weight | 30.2 Pounds |
Efficiency | High Efficiency |
Connector Type | IP68 solar connectors |
Included Components | 1x solar panel |
Maximum Voltage | 67.5 Volts (DC) |
Maximum Power | 400 Watts |
UPC | 840315218680 |
Manufacturer | Renogy |
Part Number | RSP400LSC |
Item Weight | 30.2 pounds |
Country of Origin | Thailand |
Item model number | RSP400LSC |
Size | 400W Solar Suitcase |
Color | Black |
Style | Compact |
Item Package Quantity | 1 |
Batteries Required? | No |
J**K
Huge, powerful, great for backyard preppers, overkill for light camping
It is a beast. It weighs less than our other glass 200W Renogy briefcase panels, yet provides double the power. Folds and unfolds nicely, has two built-in handles and comes in a soft "cordura-like" case, not a hardshell like the glass briefcase panels from Renogy. But it doesn't need that much protection. There is no glass. The folding wire legs seem a bit flimsy, but they do their job. Still, be sure to have some solution worked out ahead of time to stake this behemoth to the ground, if you go camping with it. Figure it out ahead of time... not on site. On a calm day, its a no factor, but even a slight wind, can make this thing go fly. And it WILL fly!It is a really good panel overall, very well built, as I'd expect from Renogy. We have five portable folding panels of various sizes from them and they all work great. I was able to get 385W from this panel on a bright sunny day in Chicago area and that surprised me - I expected way less. Of course, if you add an MC4 cable extension to this, your watt yield will start dropping fast, the longer the cable the more loss, so go with the heaviest gauge copper you can for your MC4 cables. I know they are very heavy, but I never buy less than 10 ga cables for my extensions. It is worth the extra watts you save in reduced loss of amperage.IMO, this panel is not for picnics or day trips. It's an overkill for such use cases, but this is a perfect piece of kit for prepper nerds, zombie apocalypse afficionados, RV-ers, or those who are price conscious and want to save a buck or two during hot summer days and run their small mini split or window A/C, which is what we did - we hooked up our window inverter A/C to an Anker F2000 power station and then ran this panel into the power station. The A/C drew around 600W on average from the battery and the panel fed back 380W into the battery, and on a 2kW bank we were easily running for ~6 hours during the hottest summer days when our energy prices were hitting 50c a kWh. You would spend decades like this trying to recoup the money you put into purchasing the power station and the panel, but that's not the point. The main benefit is the grid independence. The fact that we can run two refrigerators, freezer, some lights, a couple fans, a router, wifi on a summer day, right after a heavy storm knocked our power out for a couple days (happens every year here in Chicago suburbs), that pays for itself many times over, especially when you think of the thousands of dollars in frozen/chilled food you have in your freezer, fridge right now. If you have a hungry family and keep well stocked, you probably know what I'm talking about. I've spent way too many days without power to not be conscious of this.If you need more than a 200W panel, then get this one, instead of buying two 200W units, which is what we originally did. Many power stations these days allow you to "overpanel" them, meaning you can have a larger wattage capacity panel hooked up to them than their MPPT will allow. It will simply only take as much amperage as the station can intake and not more. I know that my Anker C1000X can be overpaneled above its 600W limit. Anker confirmed it. Just be sure to pay attention to voltage limits, if you start stringing more panels in a series and thus doubling your voltage, because this particular panel is actually two 200W Renogy panels connected in a series into a giant 4-piece kit, so its VOC (voltage open circuit) is 47.2V, not the usual +/- 23V. Bear that in mind, if you were planning to get two of these and run in series, you'd be far above the 60V limit most power stations limit you to in today's market. Let alone that anything above 48V could severely shock you and even possibly electrocute to death. This is why I said earlier to buy this 400W panel instead of two 200W panels and put them in a series. Price wise, it saves you a couple hundred bucks.This model I'm reviewing doesn't have it, but Renogy also sells this panel on their website (same price + free shipping!!!) and offer a model with Renogy Rover charge controller, so you could literally hook this up to your RV battery + some fuses or circuit breakers. Their Rover charge controller works very well - I have it on our other Renogy folding panel and it has settings for AGM, flooded, gel, LIFEPO4 batteries and is fully waterproof!As I said, this a a really great panel for back yards as an energy backup or large camping or cabin trips into wilderness, to complement your power station. It's big, even when folded, it takes a decent amount of space in the trunk (and won't even fit in smalll compact car trunks (doesn't fit in my Subaru Impreza hatchback trunk, though, just by mere couple inches...).I bought some plastic tent stakes, small carabiners, and a bunch of bungee cords to fasten this to the ground, because even in a moderate wind, this thing will tip over in a blink of an eye.What I actually bought this for is to act as a secondary off-vehicle array for my cargo trailer I'm converting into an RV - I will already have 900W worth of Renogy CIGS panels on the roof, but need a second array to supplement them when the RV will be parked in a shade and I need to top off the 5kW battery. And this is where this folding panel will come in super handy. Besides the sale markdown price, my main selling point was the weight per 100W of power. It wipes the floor with the Renogy glass briefcase panels we alreayd have. It's no contest. That's how light this panel is compared to those 200W folding glass panels, which are well over 30 lbs each. No, it won't compete with my 150W CIGS roof panels, which weigh mere 6.6 lbs each, but those are specialty, very expensive, and you can shoot bullets through those, drive a car over them, endure heavy hail, partially shade them and they still work perfectly, because unlike regular panels where you shade 5% of their area and lose 30% of output, the CIGS panels lose output proportionate to the shaded area. One 150W Renogy CIGS panel also costs more than this entire 400W foldable panel. You get what you pay for and CIGS panels were developed by DARPA for U.S. military. But, that's another story.This particular 400W one, though not CIGS, is still very good and I do recommend it, as long as you are clear on what your intended use cases and scenarios are. Because I need to repeat this again: it's big...
P**
Excellent quality and 'very good' output
The build quality of the 400 watt panel is exceptional. Hands down. The good looking bag is well connstrcted. It's about 30 pounds so not too heavy. Downside? The output is less than I expected.Panel setup very easy and takes about 45 seconds.Setup: full sun, mid-day, southern California desert, south facing and default angle as provided by the built-in stands. I'm charging to an Ecoflow Delta 3 Plus with an add on battery 2000 watts capacity.Reason to purchase the entire setup is for a power bridge during outages which can happen often here.Results. I never saw more than 307 watts. With my usage at approximately 60% of the total battery, I can recharge during the day as long as I curtail usage during that time. I would need 2 panels to achieve balance or I can (and will) get a generator because I can't fit 2 of these things in my space.I never expected 400 watts but I did expect 350 based on Amazon reviews.I struggled on whether to go with the 5 stars so I went with 5. That said I will highly recommend the brand and think it's a great value.
B**D
Portable, Non-Fragile, 400W
I got one of these, tried it out, and Im getting another.I bought to replace some glass panels that I use for camping/festivaling. The panels travel in the vehicle and are installed on-site. The glass panels are heavy and have always been a lot of work to mount on the roof of the van/trailer, and need extra effort to keep from breaking in transit, while covered in gear.These fold up nice and can be stowed in the vehicle without fear of getting smashed. Each panel is made from fiberglass, not glass, with a clear plastic coating, so they wont shatter.First full usage was a couple sunny days in April, at approximately 8,000 feet in CO. Propped it up on the non-adjustable legs and turned to point at the sun - I got around 360W for the hours before and after noon and with effort could get it to peak at just under 400W.I will probably make a mount out of some aluminum c-channels, to clamp on the long edges. So I can mount on the top of the van/trailer.This seems expensive, at least when compared with surplus glass panels. But it works and is very transportable. For my use it is worth the extra cost. BTW, I was patient and kept an eye on the price, and got a reasonable % off the actual price, not their silly MSRP price.
K**T
Decent lightweight 220w panel for our camper
This is our third Renogy solar panel. The original 200w glass panel still works well, but it's ~40 pounds. The second one is a 100w lightweight panel which I like a lot, but sometimes I want more power. So, I ordered this 220w panel. (Sure, I could have ordered another 100w and ganged them up.)This 220w panel is less than 20 pounds, and folds in fourths so it's not too large in storage. I hooked it up to our camper and put it out in hazy North Carolina summer sun, and got ~170 watts immediately, which went down to ~150w as the panel warmed up. I'm happy with that given the conditions.I do appreciate the higher level waterproof rating so I can just put it out and not worry about it.A couple of things that I didn't much like: the case/cover that came with it is junk, it's just a thin zippered cover made from coated nylon, no padding or protection at all. This may be important since there are open wires connecting the panels that are exposed when it's folded. The other issue is that the wires coming out of the panel are super thin, not heavy gauge at all, so I suspect that may limit power output versus an 8 or 10ga wire. My other panels have heavier gauge wire.Overall I'm happy with it, and it'll get a lot of use while boondocking in our camper.
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منذ أسبوعين
منذ أسبوعين