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Two big LiFePO4 boxes with the exact same 3,840 Wh nameplate — and almost nothing else in common. The F3800 spends its size budget on a 6,000 W, 120V/240V split-phase inverter that ties straight into a subpanel and scales to around 27 kWh. The Elite 400 spends it on a sealed, 120V-only pack you can roll across the house one-handed, that sips around 12 W at idle and costs $500 less. The capacity tie is a red herring; what you’re actually choosing between is capability and scaling versus livability and value. Below, which one wins depends entirely on which buyer you are.
| Spec | Bluetti Elite 400 | Anker SOLIX F3800 |
|---|---|---|
| Capacity | 3,840 Wh | 3,840 Wh |
| Rated output | 2,600 W | 6,000 W |
| Surge | 5,200 W* | |
| Weight | 86 lb | 132 lb |
| Chemistry | LiFePO4 | LiFePO4 |
| AC recharge | ~2.5 hr | ~2.5 hr |
| Solar recharge | ||
| Ports | 4× AC (2,600 W total), 2× USB-C 100 W, 2× USB-A 15 W, 1× car 120 W (9 total) | 6× AC (incl. NEMA 14-50 + NEMA L14-30R), 3× USB-C 100 W |
| Solar input | 1,000 W max (12–60 V / 20 A) | 2,400 W max nominal† |
| Price | $1,299 | $1,799 |
| $/Wh | $0.338 | $0.468 |
| Voltage | 120V only | 120V/240V split-phase |
| Expandable | No (sealed) | Yes, to ~26,880 Wh single-unit |
| UPS | Yes, 15 ms switchover | Yes |
*Elite 400 surge 5,200 W is the startup-transient peak; its separate 3,900 W Power Lifting figure is resistive-only and is not counted as motor-start headroom. †F3800 solar input ceiling caps real input around 1,200 W with third-party panels due to 60 V / 25 A-per-port limits. Blank cells indicate a figure was not recorded in our research, not that the feature is absent.
The 3,840 Wh tie means the real question is what the rest of the box is for. Buy the Anker SOLIX F3800 ($1,799) if you need 240V split-phase from one unit (whole-house essentials with 240V) or the ability to scale past a single battery (multi-day and expandable off-grid) — and only if you’ll plan its recharge, because its solar and charge-while-outputting story is its documented weak point. Buy the Bluetti Elite 400 ($1,299) for everything 120V and essentials-scale: it’s cheaper per Wh, half-again lighter and actually rollable (roll-anywhere essentials backup, on a budget), sips far less at idle for stored readiness (set-and-forget stored reserve), and has the confirmed clean UPS handoff for medical loads (CPAP and sensitive-electronics overnight backup). The F3800 is the more capable machine; the Elite 400 is the more livable one. Match the box to the job, not to the matching capacity number.