The EcoFlow Delta 2 and Jackery Explorer 1000 V2 are two of the most popular power stations in the 1kWh class — and they represent genuinely different approaches to the same problem. The Delta 2 pushes higher output, faster charging, and more features into a slightly heavier package. The Explorer 1000 V2 delivers comparable capacity in a lighter, simpler, more affordable unit with the longest warranty in the industry. Both use LiFePO4 batteries. Both are excellent. The right choice depends on whether you value power and features (EcoFlow) or weight, simplicity, and value (Jackery).
I’ve used both of these stations extensively — the Delta 2 as my primary home office backup and the Explorer 1000 V2 as my go-to camping companion. After months of real-world testing, here’s how they actually compare across every category that matters.
Quick Specs Overview
| Specification | EcoFlow Delta 2 | Jackery Explorer 1000 V2 |
|---|---|---|
| Capacity | 1,024Wh (LiFePO4) | 1,070Wh (LiFePO4) |
| AC Output | 1,800W (2,700W surge) | 1,500W (3,000W surge) |
| X-Boost / Equivalent | Yes — up to 2,200W | No |
| Weight | 27 lbs (12.2 kg) | 23.8 lbs (10.8 kg) |
| Dimensions | 15.7 × 8.3 × 11 in | 12.7 × 8.5 × 10.7 in |
| AC Charging Speed | 0-80% in ~50 min (1,200W max input) | 0-100% in ~60 min (1,000W max input) |
| Solar Input | 500W max | 400W max |
| Battery Cycles | 3,000+ to 80% | 4,000+ to 70% |
| UPS Mode | Yes (30ms switchover) | No |
| Expandable | Yes — up to 3,072Wh with extra battery | No |
| App Control | Wi-Fi + Bluetooth | Bluetooth (Wi-Fi via app) |
| Warranty | 5 years | 10 years |
| MSRP | $999 | $799 |
| Typical Sale Price | $549-$699 | $399-$499 |
Detailed Comparison
The Delta 2 packs 1,024Wh of LiFePO4 capacity. In real-world testing, usable capacity is approximately 950-980Wh after accounting for inverter efficiency losses. That’s enough to run a 60W mini-fridge for about 13-14 hours, charge a MacBook Pro roughly 12 times, or power a 100W CPAP machine for about 9 hours. The Delta 2’s capacity is slightly lower than the Jackery on paper, but the difference (46Wh) is negligible in practice — about one extra phone charge.<br />
The Explorer 1000 V2 delivers 1,070Wh of LiFePO4 capacity — 46Wh more than the Delta 2. Usable capacity is approximately 990-1,020Wh. That translates to roughly 14-15 hours on a 60W mini-fridge, 13 MacBook Pro charges, or about 9.5 hours on a 100W CPAP. The capacity advantage is real but small — you’ll notice it only in extended-use scenarios where every watt-hour counts, like multi-day camping without recharging.<br />
Jackery wins capacity by a slim margin — 1,070Wh vs 1,024Wh. The 46Wh difference is about 4.5%, which translates to roughly 30-45 extra minutes of runtime on typical loads. It’s not a dramatic advantage, but if you’re choosing between two otherwise comparable stations, more capacity is always better.<br />
The Delta 2 delivers 1,800W continuous AC output with 2,700W surge — 300W more continuous output than the Jackery. More importantly, X-Boost technology extends usable output to approximately 2,200W for resistive loads like space heaters, hair dryers, and electric kettles. This means the Delta 2 can run appliances that would trip the Jackery’s inverter. Six AC outlets (vs Jackery’s three) provide more simultaneous connection options. The Delta 2 also includes a 12V car outlet and four USB ports (two USB-A, two USB-C with 100W PD).<br />
The Explorer 1000 V2 delivers 1,500W continuous AC output with 3,000W surge. No X-Boost equivalent — the 1,500W rating is the hard ceiling for continuous loads. Three AC outlets, two USB-C ports (one at 100W PD), and two USB-A ports. The 1,500W output handles most common appliances — blenders, coffee makers, small power tools, portable heaters under 1,500W — but it can’t run high-draw appliances like large space heaters (1,800W+) or hair dryers (1,875W) that the Delta 2 handles with X-Boost.<br />
EcoFlow wins output power decisively. The Delta 2’s 1,800W continuous output plus X-Boost to 2,200W gives it a meaningful advantage over the Jackery’s 1,500W ceiling. If you need to run appliances above 1,500W — and many common household appliances exceed that — the Delta 2 provides the headroom. The six AC outlets vs three is also a practical advantage for multi-device setups.<br />
The Delta 2 charges 0-80% in approximately 50 minutes using a standard wall outlet at up to 1,200W AC input. Full charge takes about 80 minutes. X-Stream technology manages the charging curve — fast to 80%, then tapering to protect battery longevity. Solar charging at 500W max input means a full solar charge in about 3 hours with optimal panel setup. The Delta 2 also supports dual charging (AC + solar simultaneously) for even faster recharging. Car charging at 96-192W is available but slow.<br />
The Explorer 1000 V2 charges 0-100% in approximately 60 minutes using a standard wall outlet at up to 1,000W AC input. Jackery’s ChargeShield technology manages the charging curve to minimize battery stress. Solar charging at 400W max input means a full solar charge in about 3.5-4 hours with optimal conditions. The Jackery doesn’t support dual AC + solar charging simultaneously. Car charging is available at 12V. The 60-minute wall charge is fast and competitive, though slightly slower than the Delta 2’s 50-minute 0-80%.<br />
EcoFlow wins charging speed, though the margin is smaller than you’d expect. The Delta 2 reaches 80% in 50 minutes vs the Jackery’s full charge in 60 minutes — meaning the Jackery actually reaches 100% faster than the Delta 2 reaches 100% (which takes ~80 minutes). For solar charging, the Delta 2’s 500W max input vs 400W gives it a slight edge. The dual charging capability (AC + solar) is a genuine advantage for the Delta 2 in time-critical situations.<br />
The Delta 2 weighs 27 lbs (12.2 kg) — about 3.2 lbs heavier than the Jackery. Dimensions are 15.7 × 8.3 × 11 inches — slightly larger in footprint. The Delta 2 has two side-mounted handles that are comfortable for carrying but make the unit wider. The extra weight comes from the larger inverter (1,800W vs 1,500W) and additional ports. At 27 lbs, the Delta 2 is still manageable for one person, but the weight difference is noticeable when carrying it across a campsite or loading it into a vehicle.<br />
The Explorer 1000 V2 weighs 23.8 lbs (10.8 kg) — the lightest power station in the 1kWh class from any major brand. Dimensions are 12.7 × 8.5 × 10.7 inches — more compact than the Delta 2. A single top-mounted handle makes one-handed carrying possible for short distances. Jackery achieved this weight through high-density LiFePO4 cell packaging and a more compact inverter design. The 3.2-lb weight advantage over the Delta 2 is meaningful for anyone who carries their station regularly — camping, tailgating, job sites.<br />
Jackery wins portability convincingly. At 23.8 lbs vs 27 lbs, the Explorer 1000 V2 is 12% lighter than the Delta 2 while delivering slightly more capacity. The more compact dimensions and single top handle make it easier to carry and store. If you move your power station frequently, the Jackery’s weight advantage is a real practical benefit.<br />
The Delta 2 supports expansion with the Delta 2 Smart Extra Battery (1,024Wh), bringing total capacity to 2,048Wh. It’s also compatible with other EcoFlow Smart Extra Batteries. This expandability means you can start with 1,024Wh and double your capacity later without buying a new station. The Delta 2 also includes UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply) mode with a 30ms switchover time — fast enough to keep computers, networking equipment, and medical devices running during a power outage without interruption.<br />
The Explorer 1000 V2 is a fixed-capacity unit — no expansion battery option. What you buy is what you get: 1,070Wh, period. If you need more capacity, you buy a larger Jackery station (Explorer 2000 V2) or a second unit. No UPS mode — the Jackery can’t function as an automatic backup power supply. For home office or medical device backup, this is a significant limitation. Jackery’s philosophy is simplicity over modularity.<br />
EcoFlow wins expandability and UPS functionality — and it’s not close. The ability to double capacity with an extra battery and the 30ms UPS switchover are features the Jackery simply doesn’t offer. If you might need more capacity in the future or want automatic backup power for a home office, the Delta 2’s expandability and UPS mode are compelling advantages.<br />
The Delta 2 connects via Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. The EcoFlow app provides real-time power monitoring (input/output wattage, battery percentage, estimated runtime), charge scheduling, X-Boost configuration, UPS settings, firmware updates, and battery health analytics. You can monitor and control the station remotely over Wi-Fi — useful for checking battery status when you’re away from the station. The app is polished, responsive, and regularly updated with new features.<br />
The Explorer 1000 V2 connects via Bluetooth with Wi-Fi available through the Jackery app on newer firmware. The app provides battery level, input/output wattage, estimated runtime, charging mode selection (fast vs standard), and firmware updates. The app is functional but basic — no charge scheduling, no detailed energy analytics, no remote monitoring over Wi-Fi (Bluetooth range only). Jackery’s app is a monitoring tool, not a control center. The station works perfectly without the app.<br />
EcoFlow wins app and smart features. The Delta 2’s app offers charge scheduling, remote Wi-Fi monitoring, X-Boost configuration, and UPS settings that the Jackery’s basic app can’t match. If you want to monitor your station remotely, schedule charging for off-peak electricity hours, or fine-tune UPS behavior, the Delta 2’s app is significantly more capable.<br />
The Delta 2 uses LiFePO4 batteries rated for 3,000+ cycles to 80% capacity. At one full cycle per day, that’s over 8 years before the battery degrades to 80%. EcoFlow backs this with a 5-year warranty covering manufacturing defects and battery degradation. The 5-year warranty is competitive with the industry average but leaves a gap — the battery should last 8+ years, but the warranty only covers 5. EcoFlow’s BMS is optimized for the fast charging speeds, managing thermal stress effectively.<br />
The Explorer 1000 V2 uses LiFePO4 batteries rated for 4,000+ cycles to 70% capacity (approximately 3,500+ cycles to 80%). At one full cycle per day, that’s over 10 years of service. Jackery backs this with a 10-year warranty — the longest in the portable power station industry. The warranty actually covers the expected battery lifespan, which is rare. Jackery’s ChargeShield technology optimizes charging curves to minimize cell stress, potentially extending real-world longevity beyond the rated cycles.<br />
Jackery wins battery longevity and warranty decisively. The 4,000+ cycle rating and 10-year warranty represent the strongest longevity commitment from any major brand. EcoFlow’s 3,000+ cycles and 5-year warranty are competitive, but Jackery offers 33% more rated cycles and double the warranty coverage. For a long-term investment, Jackery provides significantly more confidence.<br />
The Delta 2’s MSRP is $999, but it frequently drops to $549-$699 during sales events. At $549, the cost per watt-hour is approximately $0.54/Wh. The Delta 2 delivers more output power (1,800W vs 1,500W), expandability, UPS mode, and a better app — features that justify the price premium for users who need them. The Delta 2 is the better value if you’ll actually use the extra features; it’s overpaying if you won’t.<br />
The Explorer 1000 V2’s MSRP is $799, dropping to $399-$499 on sale. At $399, the cost per watt-hour is approximately $0.37/Wh — among the best in the 1kWh class. Combined with the 10-year warranty, the Jackery delivers the best long-term value per dollar. You get slightly more capacity (1,070Wh vs 1,024Wh), significantly less weight (23.8 lbs vs 27 lbs), and double the warranty coverage — all for $150-$200 less than the Delta 2 on sale.<br />
Jackery wins pure value. At $399 on sale vs the Delta 2’s $549, the Explorer 1000 V2 costs 27% less while delivering more capacity, less weight, and a 10-year warranty. The Delta 2 justifies its premium through higher output, expandability, UPS, and a better app — but if those features aren’t essential to your use case, the Jackery is the smarter financial choice.<br />
Who Should Choose the EcoFlow Delta 2?
The Delta 2 is the right choice if you need:
The Delta 2 is ideal for home office backup, tech-savvy users who want app control, and anyone who might need to expand capacity later. If you run appliances above 1,500W regularly, the Delta 2 is the only option here.
Who Should Choose the Jackery Explorer 1000 V2?
The Explorer 1000 V2 is the right choice if you need:
The Explorer 1000 V2 is ideal for campers, RV owners, tailgaters, and emergency preparedness buyers who want a reliable, lightweight, affordable power station that just works. If you don’t need UPS, expandability, or 1,800W output, the Jackery delivers everything you need at a lower price and lighter weight.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can the EcoFlow Delta 2 run a full-size refrigerator?
Yes, but not for long. A typical full-size refrigerator draws 100-200W average (with compressor cycling). The Delta 2’s 1,024Wh capacity would run it for approximately 5-8 hours depending on the fridge’s efficiency and ambient temperature. For overnight backup during a power outage, it works. For multi-day outages, you’d need the expansion battery or solar recharging.
Q: Is the Jackery Explorer 1000 V2 good for CPAP machines?
Excellent. A typical CPAP machine draws 30-60W (without heated humidifier) or 50-100W (with humidifier). The Explorer 1000 V2’s 1,070Wh capacity provides 10-20+ hours of runtime depending on your CPAP settings — easily covering a full night’s sleep with capacity to spare. The pure sine wave output is safe for medical devices.
Q: Which charges faster with solar panels?
The Delta 2 accepts up to 500W solar input vs the Jackery’s 400W max. With optimal panels, the Delta 2 charges fully in about 3 hours vs the Jackery’s 3.5-4 hours. The difference is modest — about 30-60 minutes — and both stations charge efficiently with compatible solar panels. Real-world solar charging depends heavily on panel angle, cloud cover, and temperature.
Q: Can I use either station while it’s charging?
Yes, both support pass-through charging — you can draw power from the station while it’s being charged. The Delta 2 handles this more gracefully with its UPS mode, automatically switching between grid power and battery power. The Jackery supports pass-through but doesn’t have automatic UPS switchover.
Q: Which station is quieter?
Both are quiet during normal operation. The Delta 2’s fan activates more frequently due to its higher output and faster charging, producing a low hum around 30-45 dB under load. The Jackery’s fan is slightly quieter on average, partly because the lower output generates less heat. Neither station is loud enough to disturb sleep in a tent or bedroom at moderate loads.
The Bottom Line
These are both outstanding power stations, and you won’t regret choosing either one. The decision comes down to what you value most.
If I were buying a 1kWh station primarily for camping, tailgating, or basic emergency backup — and I wanted the best combination of value, weight, and long-term reliability — I’d choose the Jackery Explorer 1000 V2. At $399 on sale with a 10-year warranty and 23.8 lbs, it’s the most practical choice for most people.
If I were buying a 1kWh station for home office backup, needed UPS functionality, wanted the option to expand capacity later, or regularly ran appliances above 1,500W — I’d choose the EcoFlow Delta 2. The higher output, expandability, and UPS mode justify the price premium for users who need those features.
For most first-time buyers who aren’t sure what they need, the Jackery is the safer bet. It costs less, weighs less, lasts longer, and has a warranty that actually covers the battery’s expected lifespan. You can always upgrade later if you outgrow it.
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