Portable Power Calculator: Instantly Find Your Real-World Runtime
You’ve seen the dream on Instagram: a perfect campsite, a laptop open under the stars, string lights twinkling, all powered by a sleek, silent box. It’s the promise of modern adventure.
Then you decide to buy one.
Suddenly, you’re hit by a wall of numbers and confusing choices. What’s the real difference between a 300Wh, a 500Wh, or a massive 1000Wh power station? They all look the same, but the prices are wildly different. It’s a recipe for confusion and “analysis paralysis.”
I’ve been there. I’ve spent countless hours testing these units in the real world, and I’m here to tell you a secret: you’re not just choosing a battery size. You’re choosing a travel companion. Each size has a distinct personality and a specific mission it was born to accomplish.
In this guide, we’re going to forget the jargon. We’re going to meet the three main characters in the world of portable power. By the end, you won’t just know which one to buy—you’ll know why.
The Runtime Rover 🚀
Click one or more appliances to build your setup, then use the slider to see how long different power stations can last. It’s your personal “what-if” machine!
1. Select Your Appliances:
2. Select a Power Station Size:
Total Power Draw:
0 Watts
Estimated Runtime:
— Hours
Select one or more items to get started!
First, The One Number That Actually Matters
Before we dive in, let’s simplify everything. When you look at a power station, you’ll see dozens of specs. I want you to ignore them all for a moment and find the big number followed by “Wh”.
“Wh” stands for Watt-hours. This is the single most important number.
Think of it like the size of a fuel tank in a car.
- A 300Wh station has a small, 3-litre tank.
- A 1000Wh station has a much larger, 10-litre tank.
A bigger tank holds more energy, which means it can run your gear for longer. That’s it. Everything else we discuss comes back to this one simple concept.

Meet the Contenders: Your Three Power Companions
Let’s meet the team. Each one is a specialist, ready for a different kind of adventure.
1. The 300Wh “Weekend Warrior”
![A small, compact 300Wh power station next to a phone and a laptop at a park bench.]
This is the ultralight, grab-and-go champion. It’s small enough to carry in one hand and powerful enough to completely untether your personal electronics from the wall for a weekend.
- Best For: Solo campers, digital nomads working from a park, photographers on a day shoot, or anyone who needs to keep their personal gadgets running.
- Its Superpower: Ultimate portability. It doesn’t feel like a chore to bring along.
What Can It Actually Run?
This is where the rubber meets the road. A 300Wh battery can power…
Device | How Many Recharges? | Or How Long Can It Run? |
Smartphone | ~20-25 times | — |
Laptop (MacBook Air) | ~4 times | — |
Drone | ~3-4 times | — |
LED Camp Light (10W) | — | ~25 Hours |
Portable Fan (40W) | — | ~6.5 Hours |
Wi-Fi Hotspot (5W) | — | ~50 Hours |
- Perfect Solar Pairing: A 100W portable solar panel. This combo is perfectly balanced. A 100W panel can fully recharge a 300Wh station in about 4-5 hours of good sun, making you self-sufficient for days.
- The Bottom Line: If your needs revolve around phones, laptops, and cameras, the 300Wh Weekend Warrior is your perfect, lightweight partner.

2. The 500Wh “Campsite Hero”
![A mid-size 500Wh power station at a family campsite, with string lights on and a portable cooler plugged in.]
This is the Goldilocks of the power world—not too small, not too big. It has enough grunt to move beyond personal electronics and start powering the creature comforts that turn a good camping trip into a great one.
- Best For: Family car camping, overlanding trips, or as a robust emergency power source for a single person.
- Its Superpower: Versatility. It’s the sweet spot of power and portability.
What Can It Actually Run?
A 500Wh battery can handle everything the 300Wh can, plus more demanding gear.
Device | How Many Recharges? | Or How Long Can It Run? |
Everything from the 300Wh | More of it | Longer |
Portable Fridge (60W) | — | ~7 Hours |
CPAP Machine (75W) | — | ~5.5 Hours |
32″ LED TV (40W) | — | ~10.5 Hours |
- Perfect Solar Pairing: A 100W or 200W panel. A 100W panel will keep it topped up, but a 200W panel gives you the confidence to run a portable fridge all day and still end with a full battery by sunset.
- The Bottom Line: If you’re looking to power a portable fridge or medical equipment like a CPAP, the 500Wh Campsite Hero is your minimum starting point and an incredibly capable choice.

3. The 1000Wh “Off-Grid Workhorse”
![A large 1000Wh power station at an elaborate campsite or during a simulated power outage at home, powering a fridge.]
This is the big leagues. A 1000Wh (or 1kWh) station is a serious piece of equipment. It’s less about charging phones and more about running actual appliances. It’s the heart of a true off-grid setup or a genuinely useful home backup system.
- Best For: Serious overlanders, long-term van life, or as a reliable home backup system during a power outage.
- Its Superpower: Capacity and Confidence. It can handle high-wattage appliances and run essentials for extended periods.
What Can It Actually Run?
This workhorse can handle multiple things at once and isn’t scared of power-hungry appliances.
Device | How Many Recharges? | Or How Long Can It Run? |
Everything from the 500Wh | Way more | Way longer |
Home Refrigerator (150W) | — | ~5.5 Hours |
Coffee Maker (1200W) | — | ~40 Mins (6-8 cups) |
Microwave (1000W) | — | ~50 Mins |
Power Tools (Drill, Saw) | — | ~1-2 Hours of use |
- Perfect Solar Pairing: A minimum of 200W, but ideally 400W. A 1000Wh battery is a huge tank to fill. You need a powerful solar array to make a meaningful dent in recharge time, especially if you’re using power at the same time.
- The Bottom Line: If your plans include running appliances with motors (fridges) or heating elements (coffee makers), the 1000Wh Workhorse is the only reliable choice. It’s a serious tool for serious power needs.
The Side-by-Side Showdown
Let’s put them all together for a final, at-a-glance comparison.
Feature | 300Wh “Weekend Warrior” | 500Wh “Campsite Hero” | 1000Wh “Off-Grid Workhorse” |
Best For | Personal electronics, short trips | Family camping, fridges, CPAP | Home backup, appliances, van life |
Capacity Analogy | Small 3L Fuel Can | Medium 5L Fuel Can | Large 10L Fuel Can |
Example Weekend Loadout | Phone, Laptop, Drone, Light | Fridge, Lights, Phones, Fan | Fridge, Coffee Maker, TV, Laptop |
Can it run a fridge? | No | Yes, for about 7 hours | Yes, and a home fridge too |
Recommended Solar Panel | 100W | 100W – 200W | 200W – 400W |
Portability | Easy (One-handed carry) | Manageable (Like a small cooler) | Heavy (A two-hand lift) |
The Honest Truth: The 85% Rule
One last pro tip. If a station is 1000Wh, you won’t get exactly 1000Wh of usable power out of it. You should expect to get about 85% of its rated capacity. The other 15% is lost as heat when the power is converted from the battery (DC) to the plugs you use (AC).
We’ve already factored this into our runtime estimates above, but it’s the secret that separates the beginners from the pros. Always plan for 85% usable capacity.
Conclusion: Match the Tool to the Adventure
As you can see, the question isn’t “which power station is best?” It’s “which power station is best for me?”
- If you want to escape with your laptop for a weekend, the 300Wh Weekend Warrior is your champion.
- If you need to keep the family happy and the drinks cold, the 500Wh Campsite Hero is your reliable friend.
- And if you want to power your life, whether on the road or during a blackout, the 1000Wh Workhorse is the undisputed king.
Stop looking at the watts and the numbers. Start thinking about your adventure. The perfect power companion is waiting for you.