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From Oklahoma
I purchased a Soldius1 solar charge a year ago to charge my granddaughters iPod and cell phone while we where hiking in the White Mountains of New Hampshire.
It is sold with seven plastic adapters for receiving 250 different devices including power-hungry iPods, Zen Micro MP3 people, BlackBerrys, and cellphones from Nokia, Siemens, Sony Ericsson, Samsung, and Motorola.
The solar charger worked just like the producer said it'd, and billed my granddaughters iPod in under 3 hours. Where we go camping you can find more moose than cell phone towers, therefore keeping the phone charged wasnt a challenge.
This is a excellent charger, but with a 1.1 watt/6 volt standing youre restricted to the
number of units it could charge throughout the span of each day.
This fact was born out when my spouse and I recently took my daughter and two of her friends hiking. The camp site looked like a store for Radio Shack.
Decide to try as it can, the Soldius1 was no match for all your electronic gizmos these teenagers brought along. We positively needed MORE POWER.
The Brunton Solaris 25 solar charger with 25 watts/15.4 volts worth of receiving power, gave us exactly what we needed. Everything is charged by its high output solar panels from mobile phones to car batteries. Additionally, it costs iPods and mobile phones in half enough time it took for the Soldius1.
If you think about the wide range of larger electric units it can power, the
Resilience, (they use these on the polar ice cap), and the speed with which it costs, the Brunton Solaris 25 is just a true value.
Yet another thing - you are able to join up to three models for triple the energy.
Whether youre utilizing a solar charger for camping or charging the batteries on your own yacht, its hard to overcome clean and inexpensive solar energy.