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We’ve been lucky unbearable to test a number of variegated power stations from various variegated brands over the last few years, and the Anker 555 is by far one of our favourite portable power stations. Read on for our full Anker 555 power station review…
What is it?
Anker 555 Portable Power Station PowerHouse 1024Wh RRP: £1,099.00
Overall Rating (4.5 / 5)
Stockists
Features
- Battery Pack Rated Capacity: 25.6V/40000mAh 1024Wh
- Charging Temperature: 32°F-104°F / 0°C-40°C
- Discharging Temperature: -4°F-104°F / -20°C-40°C
- AC Surge Power: 1500W
- DC Output Port: 88%
- USB-A/USB-C Output Port: 90%
- AC Output Port: 85%
- DC Input/DC: 120W Max
- USB-C Input: 100W Max
- USB-C1 Output: 100W Max
- USB-C2 Output: 60W Max
- AC Output: 230V~, 50Hz, 1000W
- USB-A Output: 2.4A Max Per Port
- Car Charger Output: 12V⎓10A
What we thought
We’ve been fortunate unbearable to test a variety of portable power stations with a similar topics and spec over the last couple of years, so we’ve quickly learned well-nigh the various features that we like most and have a good understructure for comparison.
Anker are well known for their reliable pocket USB power banks, the kind typically used to top up your mobile phone on days out and short weekend camping trips. Whilst these small power banks are undoubtedly useful, a larger, higher-capacity power wall provides far increasingly versatility.
I’m unchangingly looking for a product that feels sturdy and well made considering when you’re using a product like this, is likely going to be used in a van, whilst camping and virtually the home and garden.
The Anker 555 has a solid, weighty finger and comes in at virtually 12kg which is neither the lightest nor heaviest similar spec power station that we’ve tested. The heft is reassuring rather than cumbersome though and the product is well packaged and is supplied with a mains charger and 12v charging cable.
The mains power brick is chunky, but in use when charging it’s not noisy, and should you wish to, you can plug in a solar panel (available separately) and tuition the power station that way.
Pros
- Bright and well-spoken exhibit which shows you how much time you can protract using the unit based on the current power usage
- It charges in a few hours when plugged into the mains
- Integrated stock-still siphon handle
- The wing of 2 mains plug and 2 USB inputs, 3 USB C and 12V car socket midpoint you can power/charge multiple items at once
- It charges external items like a smartphone quickly (similar to mains performance)
- A solar panel can be used with the power station
- The unit has a seated light that I found very useful
Cons
- It is quite heavy, so not something you’d want to be delivering a long distance
- If you place a heavy load on the power station the internal fan does kick in, causing some noise
The verdict
Performance 4.5/5
Practicality 4.5/5
Features 5/5
Value 4/5
Overall Rating (4.5 / 5)
Once you start using power stations when camping and at home, you realise just how useful they are and wonder how you managed without one. We’ve not taken it camping yet, but have used it extensively virtually the home and will be making flipside post when we’ve used it increasingly out and about.
I do a lot of crafting over the winter months requiring the use of several USB-powered tools. I moreover make a lot of short videos for social media and photograph products for the small handmade merchantry that I run.
Having the worthiness to make things, take photos anywhere and plug in my USB ring lights has proved invaluable. For DIY tasks virtually the house too, I’ve found it extremely useful. My sander and drill both have short power cords and be a real pain to use in unrepealable locations in my home.
I’ve recently completed a downstairs washroom and hallway redesign which have both required me to put new shelves and various other things up, and anything I’ve plugged in (even our main TV) have all run perfectly from the Anker 555 PowerHouse.
Do be enlightened that whilst the Anker 555 portable power station is perfect for camping and is unconfined to have in an emergency at home when there’s a power cut, if you want something capable of running high-draw appliances, you’ll probably want to squint at something from higher up in the Anker range.
This certainly isn’t the cheapest power station out there capable of delivering 1000W, but during the last 6 weeks of scrutinizingly daily use, the shower has lasted well and provided dependable, solid performance making this an spanking-new portable power station choice.
DISCLOSURE | Thank you to Anker who supplied the featured product to us to test. We were not paid to write this review.
Where to next?
- CAMPING TIPS | A Beginner’s Guide to Camping – How To Enjoy Camping
- CAMPING | Everything You Need To Create Your Own Comfy Camping Setup
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