Omnicharge Omni Ultimate Powerbank (USB-C, AC out, DC out, 12x18650)

It looks like they have a proprietary connection on the DC out similar to the one that connects the replaceable battery to the device. Probably because a typical 5.5x2.1 or 5.5x2.5 mm jack isn’t meant for 70 V. It will probably come with an adapter cable with lots of tips just like the original Omnicharge.

The OLED screen at least on the current one tells you the consumption in watts drawn from the batteries (so includes losses). I measured the efficiency at about 85-90% on the Omnicharge Pro depending on load. Highest with the DC output charging a Macbook Pro (16.5 V) or with a 20 V DC load at 2 A which would indicate that the batteries have at least part of them in series (smaller voltage difference).

Btw, my Omnicharge has the NCR18650GA, which they probably use in this one as well.

Good to know, thanks! I’m a lot more interested now.

interesting product but the price is not for my wallet right now

Cough….
I can make one, for cheaper, but not as beautiful
Just grab a car battery and a sine inverter, done :3
If you want to charge your phone, plug your adapter in, sime as that

They say the $299 is half off the normal price. I’d love to get one, but it’s on the expensive side.

Been there, easier said than done. A true sine wave inverter will run you about $100, not those fake sine wave at $30 or less and the inverter alone would be the size of this whole unit. You’ll need to either use LiFePo4 or a 12-24V inverter because 3S Li-Ion triggers LVP too quickly and 4S might be too high. Independent inverters with high output requires substantial load in order to maintain good efficiency, some can consume up to 30W while idle.

Ended up spending $200 for a 600W true sine wave inverter, in a wheeled toolbox with 125Ah AGM battery, 75V/15A MPPT solar controller for multiple input options, the unit weights about 100 lbs but runs very well and can be used as a UPS indefinitely by using a 350W AC-DC adapter on the input side. I’m going to post a build thread when it’s finished. It’s better than most “diy portable solar generators” out there spec-wise, but if I ever had to do everything again I’d just buy a goal zero yeti lithium instead, much more compact and can be easily transported around. Same applies with this Omni charge, many have attempted DIY power banks with adjustable DC out with little success, let alone 110V and 60W USB-C Power Delivery.

Whats new to this Omnicharge?

USB-C PD 2.0 compatibility!

I Like the Wireless charging

For $300

just buy this handy portable charger

+1 for self-propelled chargers :slight_smile:

Cool!

Put two wheelchair batteries in an ammo can, couple of usb ports and call it a day. Under 100 bucks.

Ah!

This is where you guys are half right, half wrong.

You can make a higher capacity battery pack for cheaper.

However, it uses lead acid cells, which you can only drain down to 50% SOC before losing a lot of cycle life, while you can drain down a lithium ion battery pack down to 10% SOC and have even better cycle life than a 50% SOC lead acid.

Second, his design only has USB A ports, not USB-C ports which can receive and output 60W of power.

3. It does not feature a pure sinewave inverter.

4. It’s much lighter.

I really don’t care about usb-c… or a built-in battery powered inverter. I’m strong enough to lift 5lbs. Had single one of these wheelchair batteries running my kids Gator (electric car) for several years before they outgrew it… It would run for hours and hours before needing a recharge with a Deltran battery tender.

The only use I found for an inverter was to run my wood stove fan during a power outage in the winter. Have 3 deep cycle marine batteries, and each one runs the fan for 20hrs. All this stuff is still less than $600.

The campaign is now live at Indiegogo.

Backed the Omni ultimate with protective case and spare battery.

It’s a huge amount of $$$ for just 290Wh but AFAIK there isn’t any other product on the market that have the same output capabilities. And then there’s the 9-30V input with MPPT controller which makes it perfect for hooking up large solar panels.

I could’ve bought the yeti lithium 400 for less but I don’t really like the idea of 12V output by direct connection to a 3S Li-Ion pack. It means below ~60% charge you would be triggering LVP on 12V devices, some are set as high as 10.8V.

My unit just shipped, will let you know more about it when it arrives.

Been playing with my unit for a couple days and these are my first impressions:

The good:
-Real MPPT controller on the input side. Tried with several AC-DC adapters and it consistently draws the maximum Wattage, it first does a test run from zero to max and then depending on the voltage drop or overload protection tripping it will set the correct input current, you can even watch the input power drop as the adapter heats up.
-Independent DC input and output module allows for pass-through charging
-Can be charged via DC and USB C PD at the same time
-DC output is precise and within 0.03V of set voltage

The bad:
-The unit has to be manually turned on and doesn’t auto turn off if there’s something connected, even when the device being charged is full.
-MR30 to DC adapter had a very loose fit on the 5.5x2.1mm side, maybe it was done on purpose to avoid cable stress?
–6 small screws has to be removed to change the battery, which was advertised to be plug and play.
-No displaying of V and A, just W
-The rubber surround was loose around the sides and feels like it will get worse over time.

Thanks for the impressions.

It should be pretty straight forward to make your own MR30 to anything cable. Can you confirm the pinout on the output:

I suppose the signal isn’t used if there’s just a normal 5.5x2.1mm connector on the other end.