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$139.99
| Connector Type | USB Type C |
| Brand | Renogy |
| Battery Capacity | 72000 Milliamp Hours |
| Color | 72000mAh/266Wh |
| Special Feature | cpap battery for camping, backup power supply, Flashlight, Wireless Charging, 12v large power bank |




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| Weight | 2.79 kg |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 8.98 × 4.92 × 1.73 cm |
| Product Dimensions | 8.98 x 4.92 x 1.73 inches |
| Item Weight | 2.79 pounds |
| ASIN | B0791WDZTW |
| Item model number | GP10 |
| Batteries | 12 Lithium Polymer batteries required. (included) |
| Connectivity technologies | wireless |
| Special Features | cpap battery for camping, backup power supply, Flashlight, Wireless Charging, 12v large power bank |
| Other display features | Wireless |
| Color | 72000mAh/266Wh |
| Whats in the box | 1 x 72000mAh Power bank, 1 x 40W AC adaptor, 1 x User manual, 1 x Laptop power cable (DC to DC), 1 x Laptop power adaptors (8 pieces) |
| Department | Portable Power Banks |
| Date First Available | March 5, 2018 |
| Manufacturer | โRenogy |
| Brand | โRenogy |
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Portable Power Stations
Portable Power Stations
Home Solar Kits
JH –
Tried this out at home before going on a tent camping trip. Worked 3-1/2 nights for my cpap. It will certainly outlast me sleeping in the ground as I can only do about 2 night camping. I feel it was exactly what I wanted and I didnโt make it camping since I purchased it. Oh well maybe next year.
Leonard Phelan –
This device ROCKS. Itโs bigger than you think, it doesnโt do any of that nonsense where the cable get kerjiggled and it powers itself off until you press a button. It can power the cigarette lighter and charge over USB-C simultaneously. I didnโt even realize it came with a SUPER bright light, as well as the red lantern for the night sail.The interface is a little difficult to figure out yes, I have not tried the barrel jack output, although it is pretty nice to have. Also, it would be nice if this unit supported 100W USB charging, but 60W is still pretty good.Overall couldnโt be happier with this purchase
chasfs –
The battery works well to power an AirSense10 for multiple nights. Unfortunately it is larger than the allowed size of a carry on battery in Japan. Even though I had no problem bringing it in on Japan Airlines, getting it back to the USA was a giant hassle.
AboutHereAlways –
I’m pleased with this battery bank. It holds a charge nicely, and generally I think the case is well thought out. The light is bright enough to be useful, and overall it feels sturdy and well protected. The “finish” on the surface is grippy; I don’t feel like I’m going to drop it accidentally. The only gripe I’ve got is that the LEDs showing charge status and voltage are not well separated from each other, so they bleed over into one another some, making it harder than it needs to be to read status. But it’s manageable, and that seems like a small complaint.
Chris J –
I was able to get 4 nights running my ResMed Airsense 11 CPAP. I normally run with the humidifier off, so I am sure that helped. The Airsense 11 was NOT in airplane mode, so the Bluetooth was on. I used it on a 2 night camp out, ran my CPAP and charged my phone off it and still had a lot of battery remaining. I ran it down to zero and it fully charged in 5 hours using a 65w USB-C charger. I go tent camping in the summer and will be camping for a week, so I am glad to get 4 nights before recharge. I will have place to recharge it, but not having to to it often will be nice.Only thing I have found I do not like is the battery status lights have light bleed to the led next to it which makes determining how much battery remains a little annoying. When using the wireless charging with my phone, have to get it positioned just right, while annoying, that is kind of expected.This was the least expensive battery pack I found to run a CPAP on and got more time then expected from it, more features, and a known brand. I would recommend this if you have a CPAP and need a battery for emergencies or camping.
MN –
I have the ResMed Airsense 10 and the ResMed AirMini. I spent a night using each of these cpap with this battery.AirSense 10 – I bought a DC adapter and plugged it into this battery using the 12v carport. It worked perfectly and I had 10 hours of uninterrupted use. I started with 4/4 battery and woke up with 3/4.AirMini – I ran into issues using the AirMini. When I used the DC adapter and plug it into the carport, the AirMini’s lights would flash but the cpap would not turn on. Plugging into the carport did not work for me. However, I did have an AirMini cable that will plug directly into the battery’s DC in/out port. This worked and I did 9 hours of uninterrupted use. I started with 3/4 battery and woke up with 2/4.I can see myself getting roughly 3 nights out of this battery. Overall, it works. Great for camping and road trips. It isn’t TSA approved so don’t expect to take it on flights.
L. Workman –
I have a couple of these types of batteries and this is by far the best. The others they I have are cheap Chinese brands that do not even exist any more. At least I know this is an actual company that will be around in 6 months. It is much more solid that the other products I have. Very heavy for it’s size, but that’s a good thing.
Watkino Reviews –
I didn’t want to invest in a super expensive solar charging/power system for camping just to run my BPAP machine, so bought this instead. My trips are never more than 2 – 3 days, so I was pleased when I tested it and it had no trouble powering my machine for two nights. The third night it made it almost to morning, but quit a couple of hours before I awoke. No worries. I still had a restful sleep. I highly recommend this for anyone who wants an emergency backup or power for the CPAP/BPAP when traveling somewhere that doesn’t have electricity.
ReviewT –
I have used Renogy’s previous version of this same item for powering 12V audio systems at events. It’s got a lot of power and it lasts forever. Great stuff.However, the new version of this, with USB-C and wireless charging… doesn’t work quite right. Or at least, not as advertised.Using a USB-C PD charger (both 60W and 20W) this thing just doesn’t charge. One night I left it connected for 8 hours, still had 1 bar; the next night, it was dead when I woke up. Wouldn’t respond to any USB-C charger.But it also doesn’t really charge within the DC specs it says it should. I have a second one of these, an older model. It uses a 15V power supply. This should accept that to charge, but comes with a 20V one. But, well, it doesn’t charge to full no matter how long it’s connected. When it was completely dead, the 15V wouldn’t charge it at all. I know my basic electrical engineering and all the polarity, voltage, amps should be good if the label is to be trusted, but it’s not.The wireless charging does work as advertised; haven’t given charging a device via USB-C a real shot. But it packs enough power to put those 12V speakers into a much higher volume than I need at a budget price.3 stars for this just not being as advertised. Everyone’s just using USB-C now, slapping on the feature but not actually having it work is worse than not having it at all. And I can’t just use my existing power supply, so I have to carry two. Not really how I planned it…
John Rigsby –
I have a ResMed Airsense 10 that I use at a pressure setting of 9, no humidifier (hate the water up my nose). I do Cub Scouts camping with my son and not having a cpap is horrible. I needed a solution. I came close to buying a $700 solar power station, and still might but for other reasons, and then happened on this. I need a max of two nights so I looked at the power and that it can be charged by solar using USB-C, and figured that if it couldnt handle two nights I would just take a foldable solar to top it off. I got it in and believe it came fully charged, but charged it anyway. Ive used it the last two nights and it still has 4 bars, which is 75-100% charged ( the right four bars are for voltage selection). I then checked the comments again and found someone doing the same thing that got over 50 hours use out of it before recharging. With hurricanes and the odd power outage I can also use it as a backup. Ive had one or two nights like that since going on a cpap.Its not magic, its a 266Wh battery, it just happens Im not drawing that much with my cpap. Not heating water for the humidifier likely is the reason.After this last campout Hell finding this is a dream. Having a generator on a campout would be ridiculous. Not that my air mattress etc isnt. So solar was my research target. Bonus, if there are any hikes in the future I wont even need to take the solar panel. I hadnt counted on this but Ill also see if I can power a DC fan or two off of it while using it as cpap power. If the total gives me 2 days Ill be happy. That saves on D batteries. But to be honest its already paid for itself in giving me what looks like about a week of cpap power capability and emergency backup.Thing is rugged, solidly built. Now if I can just take care of the battery through proper maintenance.UpdateSo I’m on my fourth night starting out with 50 percent or two bars. One thing to note is there is a lot of bleed over from one lit led to another unlit led slot. So two fully lit leds can look like 4 with the others lighter. In fact the leds on the left can look like the 24v DC selector led is partially lit. At 50 percent there is no fully lit led next to the fourth power led, and because of this it appears green with bleed over from what ive read is the wireless charging green round light. Also you read power from right to left. So the four leds dedicated to power will show 25 percent if the right most led is lit. 50 if the two on the right are lit. Etc. Again with one led fully lit it bleeds over to the lights left and right of it just enough to make them appear partially lit. It appeared fully charged longer because the 3rd led bleeds over into the fourth as does the green wireless light. If they ever do a new design they should fix both this bleed over and what I think is a usability expectation issue and either Mark the leds or light them left to right. But that could be a culture thing.At the moment this thing is awesome. Or at least it’s meeting my desires which is the ability to Use my cpap camping and bonus I don’t need to take a solar panel if I’m going for less than 4 or 5 days. I suspect I’ll get 5 days out of it, with about 10 hours each night. No in dint get that much sleep. Certainly 4.