“3600 Watts of Freedom: The Aferiy P310 Power Station Review (Off-Grid Tested)”
Published 2025-11-20 · 2,318 views · 19m 23s
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A hands-on test of the Aferiy P310 power station powering an off-grid camper, with real solar input numbers and a price breakdown against name-brand rivals.
Summary
The video is a practical review of the Aferiy P310 portable solar power station tested in an off-grid camper setup. The speaker describes the unit's specifications, charging options, expandability, and real-world performance running a camper on solar power. He compares its price and features favorably against competitors and provides a promotional discount code.
Topic
RV & Van Living · also covers: Off-Grid & Homesteading, Cost of Living
Tactics from this video
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Use the adjustable charge dial to limit input wattage when charging from a limited circuit, such as a 1000-watt extension cord.
Protects the circuit you are drawing from by preventing overload.
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Dual charge with AC and solar simultaneously, but be aware that at 70% capacity the unit will require choosing one charging method.
Allows faster charging early on, but the charge rate steps down after 70% to protect the battery.
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Add expandable battery packs to reach up to 11.5 kWh total capacity if longer runtime is needed.
Matches storage capacity to your specific load and duration requirements.
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Use the Bright EMS phone app to control USB, DC, and AC outputs and manage charge/discharge settings.
Provides remote energy management of the unit.
Figures cited
- 3600W — pure sinewave inverter continuous output
- 7200W — surge capability
- 95% — efficiency
- 10 milliseconds — UPS transfer time when grid power goes out
- 1500 watts — maximum UPS charge and draw limit
- 3500 cycles — battery cycle rating
- 20 amps — maximum solar input current
- 2000 watts — maximum solar input wattage
- 722 watts — current solar input from three panels
- 3 hours — estimated full charge time with four 400W solar panels
- $1,000 — approximate price with promotional code NASP310
- 30 hours — runtime for a full-size refrigerator on the unit alone
- 75 watts — approximate draw of a refrigerator
Pain points addressed
I want to live off-grid but worry about reliable power for my camper
Name-brand solar generators cost too much for the capacity I need
I need a power station that can handle high-surge tools like air compressors and table saws
I want to run my camper AC overnight without draining the battery
I'm concerned about warranty and support when buying a less-known brand
