Anker Solix E10 Delivers 12.3-kWh Home Backup, but Installation Can Top $21,000
Updated
Updated · ZDNet · Jul 15
Anker Solix E10 Delivers 12.3-kWh Home Backup, but Installation Can Top $21,000
3 articles · Updated · ZDNet · Jul 15
Summary
Four months of testing found Anker’s Solix E10 kept essential home circuits running reliably, with a two-battery setup storing 12.3 kWh and supporting refrigerator, furnace, lights and kitchen outlets.
A 600-watt baseline load translated to about 20 hours of battery runtime, but adding roughly 2 kW from small appliances cut that to around six hours, underscoring why one stack mainly covers essentials.
Outage switchover was usually near-imperceptible, yet one simulated grid loss during active solar export caused a roughly 20-second blackout; Anker said a firmware update will fix that AC-coupled solar issue.
Generator integration stood out: a propane unit pushed 3.5 kW into the batteries, and a 20-pound tank held enough energy for about one and a half full recharges of the battery bank.
Economics depended on utility rules: the system cut one month’s bill 57% and produced a $51 June credit, but annual savings stayed flat under California’s older NEM2 plan while newer NEM3 tariffs could improve payback.