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Anker SOLIX F2000 Portable Power Station (2048Wh/2400W) $999 Delivered @ Anker SOLIX AU

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Ozbargain
This post contains affiliate links. OzBargain might earn commissions when you click through and make purchases. Please see this page for more information.

Update: Due to the strong demand from the OzBargain community, we’ve been able to secure an additional 240 units at the same $999 price.

We know quite a few members missed out the first time, so we wanted to reopen the deal and give more people in the community a chance to get in on it.

Thank you again for the strong support, and we hope this helps more OzBargainers enjoy the offer while stocks last.

Hi OzBargainers,

We know this community values a strong cost-per-Wh ratio, so we've put together an absolute monster of an exclusive deal for you.

For a strictly limited time (and limited stock), you can grab our Anker SOLIX F2000 (2048Wh / 2400W) for just $999 Delivered! That works out to under $0.50 per Wh for a premium LiFePO4 unit with a 5-year warranty.

👉 Anker SOLIX F2000 Portable Power Station - 2048Wh | 2400W

RRP: $2,999.00
Current Website Price: $1,699.00
OzBargain Exclusive Code: Ozbargain (Takes an extra $700 OFF!)
Final Price: $999.00
⚠️ Important Checkout Tip: Our website usually applies an auto-discount at checkout. Please make sure to REMOVE the auto-applied code first, then enter the code Ozbargain to drop the price down to $999!

Quick Specs:

Capacity & Output: 2048Wh / 2400W AC (Surge up to 3200W). Runs 99% of appliances.
Battery Tech: EV-Class LiFePO4 Batteries (3,000+ cycles to 80% / ~10 years lifespan).
Fast Charging: HyperFlash™ AC input (0-80% in just 1.4 hours).
Warranty: 5-Year Full-Device Hassle-Free Warranty.
⏳ Terms & Stock Limit:
We have capped this code to strictly 100 units only. Once the 100 redemptions are hit, the code will automatically expire.
Officially valid from May 14 to May 31, but at this price, we expect the 100 units to go very fast.

Feel free to ask any questions in the comments!

(Disclaimer: I am a store representative of Anker SOLIX AU.)

Anker Solix Referrals

Referral: random (8)

Referee: 10% off.
Referrer: 10% back of referee's purchase.

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Comments

Search through all the comments in this post.
  • How does it compare with this — https://ebay.us/m/j8DORU

    • Like any consumer, I'd say do your own research. Anker is very proven. The voltx has better specs on a paper and claim to use newer cell (if that's even a thing?). The anker has a 5 year warranty, the voltx 2 yr - if they'd actually be honoured. The voltx claims higher cycles (4k vs 3k) if you trust specs lol.

    • The Anker has 10% less capacity (roughly) but it does have wheels! I think the Anker is the bargain here, especially once you factor in shipping on the VoltX.

      The Allpowers R2500 comes down to $937 with ebay plus; https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/297351654918 but I think the Anker is by far the better deal at $999.

      • Allpowers have a pretty terrible reliability reputation

    • If comparing - to get all of those functions costs more putting them together separately.

      167Ah@12V is pretty decent

      App control, built in AC inverter, mppt etc are neat features.

    • The fans on the Voltx 2400 sound like jet engines. And they start up even on small loads and also when charging from solar panels or 12v socket.

    • I'm not sure about these specific products, but reckon Anker and Volt X are in different leagues quality wise so would recommend Anker.

      FYI, The DC charging input on my Voltx power station melted due to a poor connection from either the plug not being fully inserted or working loose somehow. There's arguably some user error involved but IMO the type of connector used isn't fit for purpose. The general quality of the power station and accessories doesn't seem great.

      I DIY fixed by wiring in an Anderson plug because the cost to return for possible warranty repair/replacement was prohibitive (interstate and by courier due to being large Lipo) and seller refused to reimburse regardless of whether it was deemed a genuine fault or not.

  • UPS Switch Time:<20ms Really good price otherwise.

    • Are any doing better than this that aren't dedicated UPS?

      • Most of the new 2025/2026 models claim < 10ms. I've seen reviews of people putting them on scopes and the times are under 10ms.

      • The Ecoflow River 3 Plus has UPS switch time of <10ms, which I just picked up. It seems to work keeping my home server and network equipment up.

        • I bought the Delta 3 Plus for the same reason. Keeps my two NBN boxes, router and WiFi up and running during our constant summer blackouts. I have the Delta Max to run my business computers etc.

          Saving up / trying to justify one for the home hifi.

        • I have the exact same one, for the same reason. I couldn't justify double the price for less battery storage for a UPS.

    • Yeah, reviews are saying real world switching is closer to 30ms, not the claimed 20ms from Anker. Otherwise this device looks good, just can't be used as a direct switching backup for tech things

      • most atx power supply 16ms. at full power.
        most pc running basics be fine imo. will find out and yank the power when delivered.

  • Cracker deal - Would have bought if I didnt have a c800 and c1000 already

  • Perfect timing, I've been waiting for something like this. Ordered. Thanks OP.

  • Capacity & Output: 2048Wh / 2400W AC (Surge up to 3200W).

    Web page says : Power high-wattage devices up to 3600W.
    Web page specs say : AC Surge Output: 2800W

    Please help me understand.

    • From my limited experience using around 5 various power stations, the peak surge is overstated and really hard to prove.

  • You guys should know it's over 30kg……

    • I guess that's why it has wheels, so you can roll it around.

      • You're saying it comes with wheels… for free!? The Mac Pro Wheels were more expensive than than this entire station 😭

    • It's not the size, it's how… Oh wait. Yeah that is kinda heavy…

    • Can use as weight for exercise…… Bonus feature

      • should self charge from kinetic like a hybrid.

  • is this good for my shed

    • Probbaly - main thing to look at is wattage output and make sure your tools or whatever dont use over that, or youll be sacrificing power/they wont work.

    • I’d be concerned about temperature changes in said shed

  • Fan noise on this?, My VOLTX regularly fans up loudly in UPS mode for the fridge, It's not even drawing power just in pass through it does it.

    • Reviews say Voltx fan is terrible & Anker is good. but no personal experience

    • Voltx 2400 has terrible fan noise. I regret buying one.

  • Max Solar Input 1.000w
    LFP Battery Charge Cycles 3.000 Times

  • Desperately trying to resist this. The Anker app looks so slick. I managed to DIY a rolling toolbox with a 200ah battery and 1700w inverter and built in solar regulator and Victron smartshunt, which has more overall capacity than this but it's so darn clunky and awkward compared to this lovely Anker:) And did I mention the app? It's a thing of beauty.

    Congrats to the 100 ppl who manage to grab one of these!

  • The handle and wheels allow for smooth travel over distances up to 125mi (201.1km), so no obstacle can stop this portable power.

    Bugger, was hoping to drag it 205km

    • Very strange spec haha

      • instead solar, its self charging wheels…. bargain.

    • Engineering tolerances built in, you’ll be fine.

      Enjoy your hike!

  • UPS dell desktop omen…yay or nay…
    power goes off particualry summer… worried bios will corrupt one day.. then gain… this might f it more…like a double whammy?

    • got one - thats 6hrs + runtime off grid. rtx5080 (but not when gaming)
      will yank the power and see if works.
      eitehr way great for the patrol fridge etc.

      • Wow, you really can't fit a whole lot of power into an esky sized device.

    • Pretty over kill for a desktop, it's more of a backup power source/generator for when your entire house loses power.

      • true… winter = heater.. summer = backup pc (when power is unreliable)
        10% time = camping.

  • Perfect for charging my earbuds.

  • OP, any chance the C1000+EB will also be on this price? Would prefer C1000+EB package so I can have the option to bring the main unit in camping.

  • It's the older model — the Anker C2000 Gen 2 is newer with a 10ms switchover and faster charging.

  • Thanks OP, picked one up. I intend to use this to save on my power bills.

    Despite my better judgement ( https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/954686 )

    Couldn't help myself :p

    • Was just reading thru that post you have linked above. For what its worth, I thought you were severely misunderstood by many ppl! I got what you meant straight away and I am still trying to use your reasoning to excuse buying one of these, haha. Even if it doesn't really make sense. Or does it? :)

      • Of course it makes sense haha

        Well maybe. There are apparently energy providers that provide 2 cheap windows throughout the day e.g. https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/958459

        Now that is a game changer for this strategy as you get double the usage out of each power station. In theory this one will provide up to 4kWh per day at discounted rates during the peak window (in addition to powering appliances during the off-peak rate windows).

        I can see how this can get a bit confusing…

        • The cheap windows during the day or early morning usually have more expensive daily supply charges and also peak is alot more..

        • I have a 42kWh battery and those free power plans only make sense for about 4-6 months over winter. Rest of the time i'm better off on a different plan FWIW

        • Glorbird daily charge is high from my memory. OVO has ev rate cheaper at 4.5c.

          I prefer free window 3-4 hours to charge up my battery. Glorbird gives $1/d for not using energy in the evening. In winter/summer for larger family, if using over 30kW/d, 4.5c rate would be cheaper.

          In short,
          Summer/winter: On EV plan
          Autumn/spring: On Free Hour Plan

    • 2kWh for $1k is expensive compared to solar battery designed for the purpose instead you can make money out of it.

  • Cool, a Jerry can for my EV ;)

    • Very Good :)

    • which tops up like 2% in 2 hours? more like an eye dropper with some fuel stuck in it.

    • Probably equivalent to carrying a 2L jerry can for an ICE, but weights 30kg XD

    • Exactly my thoughts, straight away calculated oh I can go 10km with this in an 'emergency'!

  • using 'Free time power'… saves…
    Daily: $0.52
    Monthly: ~$15.70
    Yearly: ~$190
    Over the 5-year warranty period: ~$950
    Over the 10-year battery lifespan: ~$1,900
    pays itself… lol

    Stored: 2.048 kWh from free power
    Usable output: ~1.74 kWh efficiency…
    Avoided grid cost: 1.74 × $0.30 = ~$0.52/day

    • 3650 cycles over 10 years. Anker claims will still have 80%+ capacity after 3000 cycles.

      Seems decent ROI for those that can't get a fixed battery, but that assumes you consume 100% of the battery everyday.

    • Great calculation that's actually quite helpful. I can't be bothered getting a home battery so how would I use something like this Anker to save money on my power bills?

      • Like they said, charge when free, use when not. Just keep in mind efficiency losses,

        and many of these will not get to 6 years let alone 10 years befor the Electronics Fail. YMMV.

        • Good points thank you for the insight.

          Yeha I might look at getting one then scheduling it to charge while solar panels are generating the electricity for free during the daytime, and then run NAS/UPS/modem stuff off it to save money there.

          Would love to run the family TV for a few hours at night but guessing the battery won't be big enough for that

          • @adrianhughes1998: Good ideas. You should have no problems running your NAS/UPS/modem and tv

            for many hours when the power station was fully charged, a full days/evenings in fact.

            • @ozhunter68: Wow that good, had no idea. might very well look into it to offset some power usage and not have to go down the home battery route.

              Reason asking is that i have some vouchers i have for presents over the years, that i could use to fund the purchase so would offset the purchase price by a fair bit.

              thanks again for your help!

              • @adrianhughes1998: Care to share some secrets about those sweet vouchers you got for presents over the years lol.

                • @ozhunter68: I would but it's my overly generous friends, I blame them. Haha.

                  • @adrianhughes1998: Was only joking anyway……..

                    I was a bit tempted by the Anker F2000 deal, but in same boat as you, already too many batteries etc haha.

      • As this is portable battery (designed for protable on wheels obviously), it's not hard waiting to your home electricity. Best bet is you set a smart timer to have it charged during the free power window. Then use it to charge your power banks or power a fan at night time. If the app can schedule the charge, it'd save these steps.

  • Would this be able to power a house for a short time?

    • 1000w = 2hours. (ave 5person home)
      500w = 4hrs (avg 3person home)
      depends what you hook up. start mathing…

    • Not really, as there is no way to plug this into a "house"

      It will, however, run various and assorted appliances (not all at the same time) for varying periods of time.

    • Short answer no.

      It has AC outlets on it that you can power a few mains-powered things with until the Anker’s battery is depleted.

      For example I have a similar product, it’s used indoors to power an oil heater at night. And the washer/dryer during the day.
      But also occasionally to power things in the backyard or (one time) when camping.

      You have to do your own calcs to determine if it’s worth your while and time

    • Thanks OP. This is a great price for a very well built and convenient all in one great unit but, like anything, you need to ask yourself what are you trying to do with it? Perfect for camping, great for the non-powered caravan or shed and a short term power solution within limits (shown above by mike44) and I am sure many other situations.

      Based on a 12V System: 2048 Wh / 12 V = 170.67 Ah Battery. Let's call it 200Ah which it most likely is which I can buy for $350. Buy 2 = $700 = 400Ah x 12 = 4800Wh. Add a good sine wave inverter ($150), a few leads ($50) and a box ($70)……..

      For the same price I have doubled my power bank. Just saying.

      • What about the charger though?

        • Good Point! Just picked up a dedicated 25W LiFePO4 smart charger for $65. Charges a 120Ah from flat to full in 5 hours

        • Correction….25 Amp charger…not 25 watts

      • Plus a bluetooth shunt, to measure capacity and how many ah are remaining, plus fuses, cutoff switches, plus the time to put it all together safely. Plus an MPPT solar controller. Plus its not going to look as sleek and compact and foolproof as this Anker. Normally I think the same as you, but this Anker really is good value.

        • Never said the Anker unit was not good value….I think it is a very generous offer made to the OZ bargain community and GREAT value

          As for the rest of your……"bluetooth shunt, to measure capacity and how many ah are remaining, plus fuses, cutoff switches" A Good inverter will have this.

          • @Packab: No Shunt in an Inverter. Also $150 will Not get you a decent inverter. You Will need extra fuses

            if you want to make it safe. I have a few power stations, as well as doing two full power systems in

            2 campervans, and made a few power stations too. If you don't so these things right and Safe,

            there is a Real Chance of Fire.

            • @ozhunter68: Buy 2 Fire Extinguishers…….One for each Camper-van. Should be OK then young fella.

              • @Packab: Have that (1). I did up an old Toyota Townace during Covid, travelled and lived in that small old

                van for over 2 years, untill I bought an old Toyota Hiace 1998 Commuter and did that up myself.

                Sold the Townace and looking at doing up a newer 2006 + Hiace Commuter again myself

                to get bit more width, less rust, and more roof space for more solar panels haha.

                I do it all myself and stay debt free, and learn good new skills haha

                • @ozhunter68: I like the sound of it. There is always plenty to learn, especially with the off grid power systems. Forever evolving. Good Luck with it.

                  • @Packab: Yep, your not wrong. I also enjoy it and like helping other newer people too.

                    With the price of rentals these days (and from what I read not going to likely improve

                    for maybe 5-10 years unless something drastic is changed), may look at living off grid

                    and will put together my own medium off grid system, so I'm practicing now lol.

                    I currently rent a big shed with power, but not sure how long that will last.

          • @Packab: This should be your minimum as a benchmark for reliability, as well as a Kings equivalent.

            https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/231620879498?_skw=giandel+2000w+…

            • @ozhunter68: That is a great unit for $300

              • @Packab: Yep. Got an older but similar 2000W Giandel. Great value for an Australian designed,

                decent well reviewd brand just like the OzBargain beloved Gooloo for jumpstarters.

                You still need thick quality cable, lugs, fuses and/or circiut breaker(s), shunt battery monitor

                (bluetooth optional, I prefer a screen), Cig sockets, USB A and C preferably high power.

                Then a decent Solar Charge Controller, it all adds up if you don't get the bottom cheapest

                in order to get a Safe and Relianle unit you can depend on. Good thing is you can repair and

                even update as needed.

  • is this solar compatible ? thanks

    • Yes.

      • The problem is it only takes a maximum of 60V on the solar input. That's a big limitation unfortunately. The newer model has 150V limit which allows at least 3 standard residential panels to be hooked up which is way better.

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