Suoaki, a Japanese company, has released a semi-portable battery pack rated at 200,000 mAh or 720 Wh. With this battery, it should be capable of charging a laptop for 11 times or a Nintendo Switch for 36 times. This kind of battery pack could be needed for those who need to travel a long distance on car, work somewhere away from the power grid, somewhere with an intermittent power supply, or just ensure that there is some extra power at home or in a remote cottage where one might want to spend the coronavirus quarantine.

The Suoaki S670 is rated at 720 Wh (200,000 mAh), which is why it is a complete overkill. You can't travel on a plane with it, because the legal limit for a battery on an aircraft is 100 Wh, but for those who need charging when travelling by car, or working from an isolated location, this is meant to be a tool to use. To put the 720 Wh capacity into perspective, this is enough to charge a modern laptop for 11 – 13 times, or an iPad Pro for 15 times, or a Nintendo Switch for 36 times. As an added bonus, the battery has two LEDs (sorry, no RGB).

The Suoaki S670 device has four AC outlets, two DC power connectors, two USB 5V/3A Type-A connectors, two USB QC 3.0-compatible ports, one USB 15V/3A Type-C connector that supports a 45 W Power Delivery, and one cigar socket (13V/10A). The battery pack can output up to 500 W of power to multiple devices at once. As for charging, the S670 can use a car charging socket (which takes seven to eight hours) or an AC adapter (which takes five to six hours). As for dimensions and weight, the unit measures 170mm×350mm×235mm and weighs 7.85 kilograms.


Number of charges, according to the manufacturer.

The high-capacity battery pack integrates multiple batteries, it has a microcontroller unit (MCU) and a battery management system (BMS) to support overcharge, overload, overheat/uderheat, overvoltage, and short circuit protection.

The Suoaki S670 720 Wh battery pack is available now in Japan. The unit is available for ¥79,880.

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Sources: Suoaki, Hermitage Akihabara

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  • s.yu - Friday, March 20, 2020 - link

    Good to know that this is more overpriced than I thought.
  • s.yu - Friday, March 20, 2020 - link

    ...I looked it up and it's 13.7kg, w/o batteries! I didn't look up how much the batteries weigh but for some reason this is literally in a different weight class, they say it's good for camping but that's more like camping outside your trailer instead of backpacking, unless you're a pro who goes hiking in the mountains with 40kg of gear, in which case ~20kg of battery may be acceptable.
  • antonkochubey - Friday, March 20, 2020 - link

    And then there's the Tesla Powerwall 2, which, sure, is more 8 expensive at $6,700, but at the same time it offers 19 times more battery capacity, as well as much higher power output.
  • Lolimaster - Friday, March 20, 2020 - link

    Tesla powerwall is better with panels, this 720w thing is useful for 5-8 hour shortages to at least keep tour fridge alive. Even getting 2-3 could be a reasonable option.
  • watzupken - Saturday, March 21, 2020 - link

    Man, if this blows, its gonna be a firework.
  • jabber - Sunday, March 22, 2020 - link

    So if this is for the situations they show..why would you not put a protective flap or cover over over all the ports?

    It's the last 5% they always screw up on.
  • MrHorizontal - Monday, March 23, 2020 - link

    Or, get a Tesla Powerwall 2 with a Backup Gateway 2 and get 3,750,000mAh. As a bonus, chain up to 4 together for added mAhdness.

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