Updated
Updated · ZDNet · Jul 17
11-kWh Backup Power Setup Exposes 3 Critical Flaws During Real Blackout
Updated
Updated · ZDNet · Jul 17

11-kWh Backup Power Setup Exposes 3 Critical Flaws During Real Blackout

1 articles · Updated · ZDNet · Jul 17

Summary

  • An 11-kWh home battery setup failed to prevent food loss in a real outage after the writer was away for about 8 hours and could not remotely manage loads.
  • A local internet and cellular outage broke remote access even though the router had backup power, leaving nonessential devices running while the refrigerator had been deprioritized; USDA guidance puts an unopened fridge at about 4 hours.
  • Heat created a second weak point: the Bluetti Apex 300 is rated only to 104°F for charging and discharging, and a hot room pushed the unit to throttle output and stop charging.
  • A third problem was physical distribution— the roughly 300-pound system was too heavy to move easily, while extension cords added trip, fire and electrocution risks.
  • The test underscored a broader lesson as outages rise: backup plans need off-grid connectivity, temperature-aware placement and a practical way to deliver power where it is needed.

Insights

Your home battery can survive a blackout, but can it handle the heatwave and internet failure that comes with it?
As personal power stations proliferate, are we building resilient homes or just ignoring a failing national grid?