Price: $119.99 - $79.99
(as of Jul 05, 2024 01:14:36 UTC – Details)
Product Description …
Customers say
Customers like the connectors, compactness, value, performance and appearance of the solar panel. For example, they mention it has a plethora of connection adapters, is space saving and works well. Some like the durability, and appearance. Opinions are mixed on charging.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
james weems –
Worked great for me
I have a Jackery 300 watt, I use this to top up the charge during the day when Iâm out camping. On a bright sunny day, it charges the Jackery surprisingly quick. Itâs a bit awkward to get it to sit at an angle to face the sun. Thatâs the trade off for its portability though. It folds compactly, and has a plethora of connection adapters. It has worked well for me, and I wouldnât hesitate to buy another, larger one of the same brand, if I upgrade my battery.
Amazon Customer –
Works wonderful and as advertised!!
Compact, quality, powerful and most importantly what was described at sale!!Great buy, great price
Chris –
Well made portable panels but low on power
These are by far the nicest quality portable solar panels I own. They fold up nicely and the case and components are very good. They store easily and are easy to set up especially with the included stand legs. My only complaint would be after a couple of uses, I am only getting about 2 amps max out of the 120 watt system even on a very hungry battery bank and this is at noon on a cloudless day. I have a 50 watt panel by another brand that matches this and takes up less space. I wish I could give them 5 stars considering the build quality, but the power just isn’t there.
misterjc –
Works well
Has a decent weight to it, and feels well made. For the price, I really couldnât pass it up. I purchased to charge my portable electric generator and it seems to draw energy even with little sun. I have no way of testing the wattage, but it kept my generator fully charged for an entire day while sitting in a window. Iâll do more testing soon and will update if anything doesnât work well, but the pack of multiple connectors for charging ports is a huge plus. Works well, not much to set up, and is exactly what I wanted at the price I wanted to pay. Happy with my purchase.
MM –
Works great
Panel works great. I have a 100w 12v inverter hooked up to a 20 amp lithium battery. I use it mainly to charge motorcycle and lawnmower batteries. It also charged laptop and phones, great for camping. Love it.
Easy Street –
Four FlexSolar 120W panels wired 2S2P, hanging vertically, recharging a 2 Kwh Solar UPS ð
I’ve been testing four of these FlexSolar 120 watt panels with a LiFePo4 2 Kwh 2000W Pure Sine Wave Solar Generator/UPS that can handle up to 500 watts of solar panel input. ( @ less than 15Amps and less than 48V ) The generator will also take an additional 1100 watts charge from the wall, but I have a timer between it and the wall socket so that it gets 110V charging power for a couple hours a night, in case it didn’t get enough sun to fully charge it during the day. This lets the solar generator charge and run with power from the panels during the day, but makes sure it gets a full charge once a night from the mains, just in case.FlexSolar’s site says these can be wired in series and/or parallel, but they don’t say how many would be the maximum. Interestingly, they each have a little red light that will turn off if they are not happy with how they are connected. (Disconnect and reconnect them properly, and the light in the center of the panel’s junction box comes back on.) Wiring these as two parallel sets of two panels in series, their open circuit voltage exceeds my generator’s 48V input limit by a couple volts, but in actual operation their combined voltage isn’t even close to threatening to do that, so I’m declaring this combination a functional success.You can see in the pic that I have my 4 panels each hanging vertically, yet I’ve seen these manage to put out just over 110 watts each in this orientation (442 watts max, so far today). It seems they really ARE 120 watt panels and would happily give me the missing 10 watts each, if I would just point them at the sun.This setup is powering my home office, and this review, with 414 watts of solar generation as I write this.The performance of these panels exceeded my expectations. Hanging them this way, though makes me wish the top two grommets were a bit more solidly reinforced. Still, 5 stars for these with their nice stands, their small form factor compared to their actual output, and their all weather durability.
CDConnally –
Works well, if you got time for it to charge
Bought for camping trip. A little slow but was in no rush for it to charge my Jackery
Danimal –
Super compact but not powerful enough
Great design but I’m not getting a lot of power out of it. Weathers the weather well. The product image looks like it somehow stands up on its own. Doesn’t.
Matthew –
Produced a peak of 78w In direct sunlight… very impressed but would definitely reccomend a higher wattage once you get anything more than a basic powerstation (as seen here)…. Will be getting a higher wattage in future for my new 2kwh ecoflow….
Amazon Customer –
I have used this one for a couple of weeks now. Small enough to hide in the kayak on weekend trips.Works nice for powering direct via UsbA and Usb C for Android, Garmin and Apple devices.Very handy with the zippers that make a small bag of the folded panel.
Thomas –
Ok
Trixi –
Trotz maximaler Sonneneinstrahlung war es nicht möglich zumindest ein Mobilfunkgerät aufzuladen. Für mehrtägige Outdoorausflüge nicht geeignet.
UpsideDownAirline –
Before I say anything else: I’m very happy with the product, but there is some room for improvement.The panel does what it says. It’s a solar panel you can fold up and fit into your backpack. On a good day, it will hit the 60W rating and I have even managed to get it to (very slightly) exceed that rating by pointing it directly at the sun and using an MPPT charger on the direct DC output.When the weather plays along, the built-in USB ports work well, and it’s plenty to charge a power bank or keep several small devices running indefinitely. It can even power a laptop under moderate load.Due to the foldable design, it’s difficult to keep pointed at the sun, and laying it flat on the ground inherently limits its power output. It also feels a bit fragile – even just while folding it back up I’ve occasionally heard a little “crack”. This doesn’t seem to have affected its power output yet, and there’s no damage as far as I can tell, but it certainly doesn’t inspire confidence.Any clouds will drastically reduce the power output to the point where the USB ports become unreliable (they’ll cut in & out every few seconds). Using the direct DC output with an external MPPT device works more reliably.