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Bluetti AC180vsJackery Explorer 1000 Plus

These two are the closest matchup at the 2kWh tier. They share an almost identical nameplate: 2,048 Wh, 2,400 W rated output, 120V only, LiFePO4 chemistry, a 5-year warranty, and a ~10 ms UPS switchover. Spec-sheet shopping will not separate them — the headline numbers are a near-tie. The comparison resolves by what each buyer needs beyond that shared core, and by what each unit actually does in the field. The C2000 Gen 2 wins more segments, because it leads on the axes that flip a decision — expandability, solar throughput, idle draw, a stated cycle life, an RV outlet, and firsthand medical-device validation. The DELTA 3 Max wins where its $51 lower price and quiet, fast-charging chassis matter and its limitations do not: fixed-capacity indoor backup and vehicle-hauled camping. Neither is a whole-home or 240V unit — both are 120V-only, so anyone needing transfer-switch or split-phase backup should look at a different class entirely.

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Anker SOLIX C2000 Gen 2
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Prices and availability change frequently
Spec EcoFlow DELTA 3 Max Anker SOLIX C2000 Gen 2
Capacity 2,048 Wh 2,048 Wh
Rated Output 2,400 W 2,400 W
Surge 4,800 W 4,000 W rated; ≈6,000 W measured brief bursts
Weight 44.8 lbs 41.7 lbs
Chemistry LiFePO4 LiFePO4
AC Recharge Time ~1.42 hr (68 min 0–100%) ~1.47 hr (≈80–90 min; 58 min AC+solar)
Solar Recharge Time >4 hr (ideal sun) ~3 hr (800 W)
AC Outlets 4× AC 20A NEMA 5-20R + TT-30R (both 2,400 W)
USB Outputs 1× USB-C 100W, 2× USB-C 30W, 1× USB-A 18W 2× USB-C 140W, 1× USB-C 15W, 1× USB-A 12W
DC Output 1× 12V car 1× 12V car
Solar Input 500 W 800 W
Price $749 $800
$/Wh $0.366 $0.391
Expandable No Yes → 4,096 Wh (BP2000)
Cycle Life not stated 4,000 cycles to 80%

Lowest-cost fixed 2kWh: apartment/condo outage backup & desk-side UPS

  • For a buyer who lives somewhere gas generators are off-limits (HOA, fire code, apartment), wants a fridge, router, lights, and electronics carried through an outage, and has genuinely decided 2,048 Wh is the permanent ceiling — no second battery, ever. Or for a quiet UPS sitting under a desk to keep a computer, NAS, or router alive through grid blips. Stationary, light-to-moderate indoor load, kept topped and ready.
  • Lowest cost of entry and lowest $/Wh in the matchup — $749 vs $800, and $0.366/Wh vs $0.391/Wh. For a fixed-capacity buyer, that $51 is pure saving with no capability given up that this buyer would ever use.
  • UPS that is proven for exactly this job. Our review reports an owner running it as a home-server UPS who credits it with preventing two server crashes over a year — firsthand confirmation of the <10 ms switchover on the precise load class this buyer cares about.
  • Quiet enough for living space. Owner consensus across our review is that it runs quietly enough for indoor and apartment use; one owner specifically cites it as the only viable option where gas generators are not allowed.
  • Back to full fast — ~68 minutes 0–100% on AC in independent testing, the strongest recharge figure in this matchup, so it is ready again before the next outage.
  • The C2000 Gen 2 is the runner-up specifically for the buyer who stores it unplugged in a closet for months between uses. Its one quiet lead here is standby draw: our review confirms a class-leading ~9 W idle (AC output off) / ~18 W (AC active) on the bench. The DELTA 3 Max standby/idle draw is not stated in our review — silence, not a pass — so for a long-dormant-then-needed unit, the C2000 is the safer choice. The price-tiebreak verdict for the DELTA assumes the unit is kept topped and maintained (as most apartment buyers do); if it is left to sit dormant, the unstated DELTA idle is a real unknown and the C2000 measured idle edge should pull the buyer toward it.

Backup you'll want to grow, or multi-day outage range

  • For the same outage-backup job, but a buyer who wants the option to double capacity later, or is doing multi-day outage math and a single 2 kWh charge will not cover a freezer-contents window.
  • It expands; the DELTA 3 Max does not. The C2000 grows to 4,096 Wh with the BP2000 (Gen 2) expansion battery. The DELTA 3 Max is a closed system.
  • The DELTA non-expandability is a documented post-purchase trap. Our review flags this as the defining limitation of this SKU, reports buyers who discovered it only after purchase, notes the information is not prominent in marketing, and warns there is no return path on opened battery products. That is a veto on this segment, not a footnote — a buyer with any ambiguity about future capacity should not buy the closed unit.
  • Real multi-day math. Our review of the C2000 puts honest full-size-fridge runtime at 14–22 hours per charge (not the 32-hour marketing claim); the BP2000 roughly doubles that. For a buyer who needs range, that expansion path is the difference between one rough night and a real multi-day cushion.
  • Both units clear typical high-surge appliance starts in practice — our review of the C2000 documents measured bursts to ~6,000 W (well past its 4,000 W rating), a successful 2,162 W kettle draw, and 1,600 W microwave peaks — so the DELTA higher paper surge (4,800 W) does not translate into a lived advantage here.

Solar-primary / off-grid recharge

  • For boondocking, off-grid camping, or van life where solar recharge between days is the whole point — a buyer who is not always near a wall outlet, so how fast and how much the unit can take from panels matters more than anything else.
  • 800 W solar input vs 500 W single-MPPT. The C2000 accepts 800 W; the DELTA 3 Max is capped at 500 W through a single MPPT.
  • The DELTA solar cut is real, per our review. It documents over 4 hours for a full solar refill in ideal sun, corroborated by a firsthand camper at ~4.5 hours from 20–35% — and explicitly calls the 500 W single-MPPT ceiling a real capability cut, not a paper spec difference for serious solar cycling.
  • Vehicle charging compounds the gap. The C2000 has native 800 W UltraFast alternator charging. The DELTA 3 Max has no dedicated alternator input — the alternator charger must run through the solar port, which caps it at 500 W and needs an extra cable; our review confirms this firsthand. For driving-to-recharge off-grid use, that is a meaningful loss.
  • Combined recharge is a standout. AC+solar at 2,600 W hits full in ~58 minutes on the C2000 — our review calls recharge speed its single most-cited owner strength.
  • Paired panel: the Anker SOLIX PS400 is the natural catalog match; the station 800 W input gives room for roughly two 400 W panels to approach the ceiling.

RV / boondocking shore-power

  • For a buyer who runs an RV or trailer and wants to plug the rig shore cord straight into the station, plus fast top-ups while driving.
  • Dedicated TT-30R RV outlet. The C2000 has it; the DELTA 3 Max has only four standard 20A AC outlets and no RV-specific connection.
  • Native 800 W alternator charging for fast recharge while driving — versus the DELTA 500 W-via-solar-port workaround.
  • Field-proven for the use. Our review documents an overlander keeping a 5-gallon electric water heater warm overnight near freezing and waking to 70%+ remaining, plus owners extending boondocking by a day or two.
  • The TT-30R is capped at 20A / 2,400 W by the inverter — it is not true 30A shore service. It runs most RV loads fine, but a high-draw rooftop air conditioner or stacked heavy appliances will hit the 2,400 W ceiling. Size loads to 2,400 W. This caps the C2000 RV win at most boondocking loads, not full 30A service.

Overnight CPAP / medical-critical UPS

  • For a buyer where the unit has to keep a CPAP (or similar medical device) running through the night and ride through a grid drop without interruption. Reliability outranks every other consideration. Both units pass hard gates — both are pure-sine 120V, both have ~10 ms UPS switchover, and 2,048 Wh comfortably covers a night at CPAP draw.
  • Firsthand CPAP field validation. Our review documents real CPAP use: a 10 ms switchover described as seamless in hands-on tests alongside computers, routers, and 3D printers, and a CPAP owner logging ~21% battery used per 6-hour night with humidifier and hose warmer running — that is, a heavy, realistic medical draw, measured, multi-night.
  • The DELTA CPAP case is inference, not evidence. Our review is explicit: no firsthand CPAP owner reports appear in our research; this use case rests on editorial inference from capacity, not validated field data. For a medical-critical pick, silence on the weighted axis is not a pass — the C2000 is the unit whose review actively confirms the job. The DELTA UPS is firsthand-proven, but for servers and NAS, not for a medical device.
  • Usable capacity at this load: CPAP is a low-load regime (~25–40 W base, climbing well higher with a heated humidifier and hose warmer), where fixed inverter idle taxes a larger share of each watt-hour — so usable energy sits below nameplate, not at it. The C2000 number here is anchored to the firsthand report (~21% drawn over a 6-hour humidified night → comfortably multi-night), measured at a real heated-CPAP load. The DELTA usable-at-CPAP figure cannot be stated with the same confidence because its idle draw is unpublished and no field measurement exists.
  • Standard caution: both are EPS-style (not online double-conversion) UPS units, so extremely sensitive equipment may still see a brief transition; for life-critical equipment, a dedicated inline medical UPS remains the more conservative choice. Verify against your specific device requirements.

Car camping and weekend trips (vehicle-hauled, wall-recharged)

  • For weekend and car-camping use where the station rides in the vehicle, a buyer runs lights, phones, a small cooler, a kettle or hot plate, maybe an electric blanket, and recharges from the wall at home or a campsite outlet — solar is not the recharge path.
  • Firsthand full-weekend runtime. Our review documents an owner running a kettle, a hot plate for two meals, an electric blanket all night, and phone charging across an overnight trip, landing at 20–35% remaining. That is the exact load profile this buyer runs, confirmed — not inferred.
  • Cheaper, and the savings cost this buyer nothing. $749 vs $800; the expandability and solar headroom the C2000 charges extra for are not on this buyer list.
  • Fast wall recharge for turnaround — ~68 min 0–100% on AC means it is ready for the next trip after a short top-up at home.
  • Quiet at camp loads — owner consensus is consistently quiet at the modest loads camping demands, good for tent-side use.
  • The C2000 Gen 2 is the runner-up for the camper who does recharge from solar between days, or who wants the slightly lighter carry and lower standby drain for a unit that sits between trips. The flip back to the C2000 is driven by recharge path, not by weekend AC performance, where the DELTA is the proven choice.
The bottom line

If you have truly fixed your needs at 2,048 Wh and you are optimizing for price and a quiet indoor/camping chassis, the EcoFlow DELTA 3 Max is the smarter spend — $51 cheaper, lower $/Wh, fast-charging, and firsthand-proven for indoor UPS and weekend camping. Its hard ceiling is exactly that: no expansion, 500 W solar, no RV outlet, no firsthand medical validation, and an unpublished cycle life.

For everyone whose needs have any room to move — growth, solar, RV, or a medical device — the Anker SOLIX C2000 Gen 2 is worth the extra $51. It expands to 4 kWh, takes 800 W of solar, has a real RV outlet and native alternator charging, sips the least power at idle in its class, states a 4,000-cycle life, and is the only one of the two with firsthand CPAP field data behind it.

Neither is a whole-home or 240V solution — both are 120V-only portable stations. If transfer-switch or split-phase backup is the actual need, neither of these is the tool.