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Two 1kWh LiFePO4 stations at nearly the same price, and they are not interchangeable. The Explorer 1000 v2 is the lightest and quietest box in the class; the C1000 hits harder, expands, takes more solar, and costs less. Which one wins depends entirely on what you’re doing with it — this page splits the buyer population into four real use profiles and resolves each on its own.
| Spec | Anker SOLIX C1000 (Gen 1) | Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 |
|---|---|---|
| Capacity | 1,056 Wh | 1,070 Wh |
| Chemistry | LiFePO4 (3,000 cycles to 80%) | LiFePO4 (4,000 cycles to 70%) |
| Rated output | 1,800 W | 1,500 W |
| Surge | 2,400 W (SurgePad, resistive-only; bench-measured ~2,100–2,245 W)* | 3,000 W (bench shutoff ~2,200 W; owner trips 1,400–1,550 W on startup)* |
| Wave | 120 V pure sine | 120 V pure sine |
| Weight | 28.44 lbs | 23.8 lbs |
| Recharge AC | ~0.97 hr (~54 min ultrafast measured / ~90 min default) | ~1.58 hr (~1 h 35 m standard / <1 h Emergency mode, app-only) |
| Solar input max | 600 W (XT-60) | 400 W (proprietary DC8020) |
| AC outlets | 6 | 3 |
| USB-C | 100 W + 30 W | Dual 100 W |
| USB-A | 2 (12 W) | Yes |
| 12 V car | 120 W | No cable included |
| Light | 3-level LED bar + SOS | |
| Expandable | Yes → 2,112 Wh (BP1000) | No |
| UPS | 20 ms | 20 ms |
| Price | $429.99 | $499 |
| $/Wh | $0.407 | $0.466 |
* Both surge ratings are spec-sheet figures; bench testing and owner reports show lower real-world performance. Neither unit is a motor-start machine.
True of both units — Neither is a motor-start machine. The C1000’s SurgePad throttles voltage above 1,800 W and a complex or motor load (a roughly 900 W microwave, an induction tool) can trip it within seconds; the Explorer trips on the same class of startup surge. If your load is a table saw, a pump, or a finicky microwave, test before you rely on either — these wins are about sustained resistive draw, not inrush.
The same unit wins one segment and loses another because each segment weights a different axis at a different load regime. The Anker SOLIX C1000 (Gen 1) is demoted in the light mobile camper segment (loses on weight and charging noise); wins the heavier resistive and kitchen loads segment (on sustained output and honest surge); wins the home and away outage backup segment (on the unattended-reliability veto from our review, plus value and expansion); and wins the off-grid solar resupply segment (on solar ceiling and adaptable connector). The axis that flips it from runner-up to winner is, in order: weight, output, reliability, solar. The Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 wins the light mobile camper segment (on weight and quiet); is runner-up in the heavier loads segment (flips out on output ceiling and surge honesty); is vetoed in the outage backup segment (flips out on no low-battery cutoff and silent AC-output drop — a reliability veto, not a spec gap); and is runner-up in the solar resupply segment (flips out on solar ceiling and proprietary connector). Its single, genuine, repeatable strength is being the lightest and quietest 1kWh box — decisive when you carry it, irrelevant when it sits still. Read plainly: the Explorer is the carry-and-be-present unit; the C1000 is the work, back up, and resupply unit. They don’t contradict — they answer different questions.