The Anker SOLIX F2000 — also sold as the PowerHouse 767 — is the RV and van life unit in this comparison, and it earns that designation through hardware rather than marketing. The NEMA TT-30 outlet is the 30-amp receptacle standard to most RV campground hookups and built-in RV electrical systems. No other unit in this lineup carries that port, which means the F2000 is the only station here that can integrate directly with an RV's internal wiring without an adapter. The 4.72-inch wheels and EasyTow handle reflect that this unit is meant to be moved, not carried. At 67.2 lb it is the heaviest in the lineup — you are not picking this up with one hand — but the wheel system makes it manageable across pavement, gravel, and campsite terrain. For van dwellers who move the station from vehicle to campsite and back, the difference between a wheeled unit and a liftable one is significant. At 2,048 Wh (roughly 1,741 Wh usable) with expandability to 4,096 Wh, it offers serious storage for multi-day off-grid stays. The five AC outlets, three USB-C at 100W each, and 12 total ports serve a van's full device load. The 2,400W continuous AC output handles most van appliances; the 2,800W surge is on the lower end for the capacity tier. Maximum solar input reaches 1,000W, matching the Bluetti Elite 200 V2 and EcoFlow Delta 3 Plus. The 114-minute full AC recharge is the slowest in this comparison, and the 3,000-cycle lifespan to 80% is the second-lowest here. At $849 against an MSRP of $1,699 it represents strong value for the van life application. Five-year warranty.
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