🌍 Go Green, Stay Charged!
The Nicesolar200W Bifacial Portable Solar Panel is a versatile and efficient solar charger designed for outdoor enthusiasts. With a powerful 21V 9.5A DC output and dual USB ports for fast charging, this lightweight and foldable solar panel is perfect for camping, RV trips, and emergency power needs. Its high conversion efficiency of 24.3% and waterproof IP67 technology ensure durability and reliability in any environment.
T**Y
Good output and very easy to pack away
You will need to buy or make a XT-60 extension cord. The included cord will be lucky to get the panel from your solar controller to the roof or hood of your car. On my budget setup, I've seen it peak at 92W and its generally in the 70-80w range, so this is very good for what it is. The included brackets to hold it up don't allow you to adjust the angle, but its a great angle to pick when horizontal and vertical are already option with a portable panel.It does seem delicate but no matter how many crack noises it makes it continues to perform well. Do not bend it. Small bends make very concerning noises. It does seem to be fine regardless, but I'm now very careful with it. If you imagine snapping this out like a picnic blanket I don't think its going to last.It is the exact same as yargo version, but comes with the handy stands to prop it up.all in all I would buy this again without a question.
C**C
Delivers 110w in the best of circumstances which is normal for this class of panel
I have several other camping panels and 50% of their rated power under perfect full sun conditions is usually what you get. It didn't get too hot to handle and its small folded size was super helpful for packing and carrying. As other have mentioned the setup on the racks is fiddly and prone to slipping over, blowing over, falling over, and very fussy to try to move. You can't just pick it up and carry it out of the shade since the stands collapse when you do that. some better design in this area would help.
D**R
Wired poorly, Flicks on and off, only works in full sunlight, but most portable option
(Testing with USBC output only so far, using Anker 737 24k metering)I tried this alongside a Blavor 100w, putting the panel on top on the Blavor for fair angle test. First, in lower, partial cloudy, the Blavor was getting 30-60, and this one was getting 9-16 in the exact same light, sometimes lower watts. In full sun, both gave the 60w output the USB maxes out on (Blavor said it's 45, but gave 60w)On the stand I also got this max (will update when I try DC output).Biggest problem is, in the slightest shade, there's big issues. The panel drops down to 12w or even less in any shade, and I believe it's something about how the panels are wired. (EDIT this is not the case, it was the Anker's input causng the issue as I was trying to charge a USB and it was routing the power there.Other than that, love the portability. Stands flimsy and hard to adjust, but do okay for what they are. Would be best to augment with extra support, a rigid bar, etc. Actual electric part seems pretty non-waterproof, a concern for long-term use.
‘**R
PSP 200N If it doesn’t pack into a Classic VW, you don’t need to take it.
My daily driver is a 1973 VW Thing. I use it for everything, every day. It’s a rehash of the WWII German “Jeep”. Same boxy look, just “modernized” for ‘73. I have a luggage bag I mount on the front hood for clothes, my tent (Eureka Mountain). I have a trailer tongue box in the rear well, and I pack the frunk with most of my rain gear, tarps, hammock, poles for the tarps and tool kit. The car is pretty much full when it comes to packing a VW for more than a weekend out in nature.I say all that to set you up to understand that I don’t have much room for more stuff. I got a Bluetti A3EB power station. It stores under the back seat. For solar panels, I had to do a lot of homework. I needed small, portable, at least 200 Watts, efficient set. Most of the foldable panels packed into a book about 2.5 feet wide and nearly 3 feet tall. I didn’t have that kind of room. I carry my spare on a tire carrier mounted at the rear. This leaves me the space where the spare used to go. I searched and searched and found the Nicesolar PSP-200N, under $300. It’s small, light, has a nice case and wire kickstands. I liked the features. I liked that it said it was compatible with my Bluetti power station and of course the size and weight.I've set it up in the yard a few times and it’s been able to push 18v at 180-193 watts. It is going to be perfect for me. Emergency power for the house, and daily power for a campsite. I’ll run a Bodega 37QT Refridge/Freezer and all my digital goodies - iPad, iPhone, internet. I don’t need much. I’m going to use some stakes and poles from an old tent. The panel is kinda floppy in the stands. I’ll just run an adjustable short pole into the grommets on either end at the top, and stake down the corner grommets on the bottom. Putting a “ridge pole” between the two fabric loops on top will support the panel in the middle. The stakes at the bottom corners will secure the panels to the ground. The adjustable poles at each top corner grommet will let me adjust the angle towards the son. This should keep the panels secure and sturdy……I hope.😆For me, it was important that I try to meet a budget and the size limits of my frunk, yet get best value in performance. I think this Nicesolar will be nice for me.
F**A
Not As Advertised!
Output of this 200 watt rated bifacial compared to another 100 bifacial: 135/200 rated watts vs 83/100 rated watts…. Same time, angle, conditions and power bank. That’s only 68% of advertised wattage compared to 83% by the other panel. You can also see from the picture that this panel is not twice the surface area nor twice as many individual cells of 100 watt panel I have shown. Good panels should be hitting around 85%. If this truely was a 200 wat panel it would be hitting around 165 watts in the conditions I tested it in. Unless I got a dude than this is false advertisement…
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