If you suffer from power outages, want to live off-grid, or need a way to store power from a solar panel array, a portable power station could be the answer. They can bring power anywhere you need in the home and out, from garages and backyards to building sites and camp sites. Since the grid is unprepared for the shift to renewable power, and our electricity demands and anxieties are soaring, high-capacity portable power stations are growing more popular. But Zendure's Superbase V6400 is the largest we have tested so far.
With a 6.4-kilowatt-hour capacity, the Zendure Superbase V6400 is an expandable, modular power storage system that charges from the mains or solar panels. It has plenty of ports and outlets to power your appliances and charge your gadgets. It is portable, thanks to motorized wheels and a telescopic handle. It also works as an uninterruptible power supply (UPS). But this is an expensive device at $5,500, and if you want to increase your storage capacity, the B6400 Satellite Batteries are $4,600 apiece.
Arriving by truck on a pallet, the Zendure Superbase V6400 is a bulky beast measuring around 29 x 14 x 17 inches and weighing in at 130 lbs. There’s no lifting this, so you must remove the box to roll it out. Luckily, a telescopic handle, large back wheels, and smaller front wheels that rotate allow some maneuvering. And you can lock those front wheels once you have it in place.
Setup is straightforward with the Zendure app, or you can use the physical buttons on the Superbase V6400. There’s also a large display, with green light bars on either side lending a futuristic look. The screen gives you a breakdown of what the power station is doing, shows watts in and out, the percentage of remaining battery life, and an estimate of how long the battery will last at the current level of drain. (This fluctuates frequently as few devices draw at a fixed and steady rate.)
After wrestling it into my office and connecting the Superbase V6400 to Wi-Fi (there’s support for Bluetooth too), I realized there’s no need to struggle moving it, because it has motorized wheels. You can drive it like a remote control car using the Zendure app on your phone. The app also gives you a detailed breakdown of incoming energy from solar or grid and outgoing energy consumption. You can set a charge limit, automatic shutdown time, child lock, and a handful of other things in the app.
The Zendure Superbase V6400 contains semi-solid-state batteries that should be good for at least 3,000 cycles and 10 years. While the lithium-ion batteries in most of our gadgets rely upon liquid electrolytes, these semi-solid-state batteries require only about half the amount of liquid. With solid electrolyte membranes that hold the liquid in place, Zendure says its batteries are safer and support much higher power density (42 percent more energy per pound). They are an affordable half-step towards solid-state batteries, which are expensive and tough to manufacture at scale.