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Jackery Explorer 300vsExplorer 300 v2

These are the same lightweight, sub-300Wh concept built one generation apart, and the newer one supersedes the older one outright. The original Explorer 300 is a Li-ion unit; the 300 v2 is the LiFePO4 rebuild of it. The v2 costs less at $269 versus $279, recharges roughly four times faster, carries true UPS, and is rated for years more service life. The original leads on exactly one axis — it is about a pound lighter — and that pound never buys back what our review documents: a battery that degrades or dies in year one to three and turns up dead in storage. The original Explorer 300 review verdict is literally skip and buy the 300 v2. This page reaches the same conclusion in every buyer segment, and explains why the deciding factor changes from segment to segment.

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Prices and availability change frequently
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Prices and availability change frequently
Spec Jackery Explorer 300 v2 Jackery Explorer 300
Capacity 288 Wh 293.8 Wh
Rated output 300 W 300 W
Surge 600 W 500 W
Weight 8.16 lbs 7.1 lbs
Chemistry LiFePO4 Li-ion
AC recharge ~1.27 hrs (0–80% in ~1 hr) ~4.5 hrs wall-only
Solar recharge ~3.5 hrs to 80% with 100 W panel (manufacturer claim)
AC outlets 2
USB-C 1× 100 W (in/out), 1× 15 W (out) 1× 60 W (in/out)
USB-A 1 1
12 V DC 1 1 (10 A car port)
Solar input max 100 W
UPS Yes (~20 ms switchover) No
Price $269 $279
Price per Wh $0.934 $0.95

Blank cells indicate a figure was not recorded in our research, not that the feature is absent.

Weekend device-charging camper

  • Who it’s for: You carry a small station to a campsite or hotel and keep phones, a laptop, a camera or drone, and some LED lights topped up across a weekend or a string of short trips. Load is light and intermittent, criticality is low, and you expect to reuse the thing for years.
  • Usable capacity: About 245–260 Wh at a 25–65 W device-charging mix on the AC port — enough to keep devices topped up across a weekend.
  • Endurance: LiFePO4 rated 4,000+ cycles to 80%, backed by a 5-year warranty; our review calls this the strongest part of the story and a flat win over the original’s chemistry.
  • Replenishment: 0–80% from a wall outlet in about an hour — fast enough to refill over a lunch break, among the faster recharge times in this capacity class.
  • Value: Lower absolute price and lower price per watt-hour than the original, so it is not a pay-more-for-newer situation.
  • Portability: 8.16 lbs with a foldable handle; our review calls it the lightest serious station Jackery makes and genuinely one-handed portable.
  • Why not the original: The original is about a pound lighter and carries a sliver more nameplate capacity. For a tool you reuse across seasons, the axes that matter are endurance (chemistry plus cycle life plus warranty), replenishment (how fast it’s ready to go again), and value — and the v2 takes all three. The original’s documented degradation-in-year-one-to-three vetoes its weight edge: a 15 percent weight saving is no trade for a battery that may not reach its third birthday. The spec the original wins (weight) is the one that matters least once duration is more than a single outing.

Closet / short-outage backup

  • Who it’s for: You keep a small unit charged and parked, then pull it out when the grid drops for a few hours — Wi-Fi, router, phones, a couple of lights. It sits idle until needed, wall power may be down when you reach for it, and it works when I need it is the whole point.
  • Usable capacity: About 250–260 Wh at a 15–60 W essentials load on the AC port — enough to bridge Wi-Fi, a router, and phones through a multi-hour outage (and your fridge stays cold as long as you don’t open it; it is not running the fridge).
  • Continuity: UPS-capable with a 20 ms switchover, so it can sit inline and carry the router and Wi-Fi through the cut — a capability the original simply does not have.
  • Standby and endurance: LiFePO4 plus a 5-year warranty; calendar aging is the failure mode that kills the original in this exact role, and LFP is materially more resistant to it.
  • Readiness: 1-hour wall recharge means you can top it back up fast between outages rather than planning around a 4.5-hour refill.
  • Why not the original: The original has no UPS, so it cannot carry a load through the moment the grid drops. Owners who charged it quarterly per the manual repeatedly found it dead or reading 100 percent while delivering nothing when an outage finally hit; a documented sub-10W auto-shutoff after 12 hours fights low-draw standby use, with the only workaround being to keep a constant load on it (which defeats the purpose); and there’s a thin but real cluster of thermal events on the charging path (burning-plastic smell, a too-hot AC adapter, a 12 V port burn injury) that argues against unattended overnight charging. For a unit whose job is to survive storage and come through in an emergency, this is disqualifying. The original is about a pound lighter, but a closet unit isn’t carried, and weight cannot touch standby reliability or UPS.

CPAP / medical overnight

  • Who it’s for: You need to run a CPAP through the night during an outage or off-grid. Criticality is medical, which turns pure-sine output and sufficient overnight watt-hours into hard gates and weights reliability above everything else.
  • Usable capacity: About 5–8 hrs of CPAP runtime at 30–50 W on the AC port, via the energy-saving mode — this is a calculated estimate from capacity and draw, not a firsthand overnight test in our research. If CPAP is your primary use, confirm your machine’s actual draw and test before relying on it. A full 8-hour night with the humidifier on can exceed this unit’s usable capacity, so margins are real on either station.
  • Pure-sine gate: Passes (assumed Jackery default; the unit is explicitly marketed for all-night CPAP).
  • Reliability: LiFePO4 plus UPS (20 ms) plus 5-year warranty; none of the original’s standby or thermal failure patterns appear in the v2 review.
  • Energy-saving mode: A physical switch for auto-off versus continuous output that Jackery positions specifically for silent overnight CPAP support.
  • Why not the original: The original passes the pure-sine gate (explicitly pure sine) but fails the reliability gate. The auto-shutoff after 12 hours plus the storage-death pattern make it the wrong unit to stake a medical load on. The charging-path thermal cluster is an extra reason not to leave it running unattended at a bedside overnight. Owner reports show about 4.5–5 hrs of CPAP on a single night at the same 30–50 W AC regime — short of a full night, and on a unit that may not even be holding charge by the time you need it. The original is about a pound lighter, but a bedside unit isn’t carried; weight is moot, and it cannot offset a reliability gate on a medical load.

True of both units — Nearly all of the v2’s figures — the 1-hour recharge, the 4,000+ cycle life, the 600 W surge, the CPAP runtime — trace to Jackery’s published specs and spec-based analysis, not firsthand bench testing of this exact unit. The verdict still holds, for two reasons: the original’s negatives are independently documented (bench capacity, long-term owner failure reports), so the comparison doesn’t rest on v2 marketing; and even discounting every v2 claim, LiFePO4 beats Li-ion on calendar aging, which is the original’s defining flaw. The v2’s pure-sine spec is assumed-by-default rather than printed in our research. The 12 V compressor-fridge compatibility issue that hit the Explorer 240 v2 and 300 Plus (both refunded and pulled by Jackery) is widely believed resolved on the 300 v2 but not independently confirmed — verify before relying on a 12 V fridge, though fridge duty is out of scope for both units anyway, given the shared 300 W and roughly 288 Wh ceiling.

The bottom line

The Explorer 300 v2 wins in all three segments, but the reason changes each time. For the weekend device-charging camper, the decisive factor is endurance — chemistry, cycle life, and warranty, where the v2’s LiFePO4 and 4,000+ cycle rating beat the original’s Li-ion and documented degradation-in-year-one-to-three. For the closet or short-outage backup, the decisive factor is continuity and reliability — the v2’s UPS with 20 ms switchover and resistance to calendar aging, versus the original’s no-UPS, storage-death pattern, and sub-10W auto-shutoff that fights standby use. For the CPAP or medical overnight segment, the decisive factor is the reliability gate on a medical load — the original’s auto-shutoff, storage-death, and thermal record make it unsafe to trust, so it fails the gate outright; the v2 is the only unit that clears the gate, though on a narrow margin and with a genuine certainty caveat, so this is the lowest-confidence win on the page. The original leads on exactly one axis across all three segments: weight, about a pound lighter. That single advantage never reaches the axis that decides. Buy the Explorer 300 v2. The original is sold out on Jackery’s site with notify-me status, likely end-of-life and possibly not buyable new.