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Best Power Stations for Electric Chainsaw (14-inch)

We tested 33 portable power stations against the Electric Chainsaw (14-inch) (1740W running / 5220W surge). 9 passed our True Surge protocol — 27% compatibility rate.

Safe

7

Tight

2

With Soft-Starter

0

Incompatible

24

○ Device source: Engineering Est.

Derived from variant list (max of variants). Running worst case = Makita UC3551A (1740W at 14.5A). Surge worst case = Makita UC3551A (5220W). Surge estimated using 3x motor-load multiplier policy (no OEM starting watts published for any electric chainsaw in this class).

Our Top Picks

Ranked by value, balance, and endurance from 7 compatible generators.

Best Budget Safe

Pecron E3600LFP

Running 3,600W
Surge 7,000W
Capacity 3,072 Wh
Weight 79.4 lbs (36.0 kg)
Carry Two-person recommended
Runtime 1.2h
Best Overall Safe

Anker SOLIX F3800

Running 6,000W
Surge 9,000W
Capacity 3,840 Wh
Weight 132.3 lbs (60.0 kg)
Carry Two-person recommended
Runtime 1.5h
Best Runtime Safe

Delta Pro Ultra

Running 6,000W
Surge 12,000W
Capacity 6,144 Wh
Weight 182.1 lbs (82.6 kg)
Carry Two-person recommended
Runtime 2.5h

As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. Our methodology

Runtime at a glance

How long each station runs a Electric Chainsaw (14-inch) on a single charge (after 0.70 real-world derate)

Safe Tight margin

Showing top 8 by runtime. See full table below for all 9 stations.

What to Know About the Electric Chainsaw (14-inch)

Power Profile

Running range: 960W (8A) to 1740W (14.5A) depending on motor size. Estimated surge range: 2880W to 5220W at 3x running (motor-load multiplier — no electric chainsaw manufacturer publishes starting watts). Voltage: 120V AC for all corded models.

Real-World Usage

Electric chainsaws draw near-maximum rated power during cutting and drop to near-zero between cuts. Load spikes occur when the chain engages wood, especially in hardwood or thick limbs. At 2 hours daily use (storm cleanup), energy consumption ranges from 1920 to 3480 Wh depending on model.

Pro Tip

Motor startup surge is the primary compatibility concern. A chainsaw that draws 960W running may need 2880W briefly when you pull the trigger. The spread between budget (8A) and professional (14.5A) models is dramatic — nearly 2x in running watts and surge. Choose the smallest saw that handles your cutting needs to maximize compatibility with your power station.

Full Compatibility Matrix

All 33 generators tested against the Electric Chainsaw (14-inch) (1740W / 5220W).

Power Station Running W Surge W Capacity Weight Verdict Runtime Report
Delta Pro Ultra X 12,000 24,000 6,144 Wh
187.4 lbs
Two-person recommended
Safe 2.5h View
Delta Pro Ultra 6,000 12,000 6,144 Wh
182.1 lbs
Two-person recommended
Safe 2.5h View
DELTA Pro 3 4,000 8,000 4,096 Wh
113.5 lbs
Two-person recommended
Safe 1.6h View
Yeti Pro 4000 3,600 7,200 3,993.6 Wh
115.7 lbs
Two-person recommended
Safe 1.6h View
Anker SOLIX F3800 6,000 9,000 3,840 Wh
132.3 lbs
Two-person recommended
Safe 1.5h View
Delta Pro 3,600 7,200 3,600 Wh
99.2 lbs
Two-person recommended
Safe 1.4h View
Pecron E3600LFP 3,600 7,000 3,072 Wh
79.4 lbs
Two-person recommended
Safe 1.2h View
Explorer 3000 Pro 3,000 6,000 3,024 Wh
63.9 lbs
Two-person recommended
Tight 1.2h View
Explorer 2000 Plus 3,000 6,000 2,042 Wh
61.5 lbs
Two-person recommended
Tight 0.8h View
Zendure SuperBase V4600 3,800 3,800 4,608 Wh
121.3 lbs
Two-person recommended
Fail N/A View
Elite 200 V2 2,600 3,600 2,073 Wh
53.4 lbs
Heavy carry
Fail N/A View
AC200L 2,400 3,600 2,048 Wh
62.4 lbs
Two-person recommended
Fail N/A View
AC200MAX 2,200 4,800 2,048 Wh
61.9 lbs
Two-person recommended
Fail N/A View
DELTA 2 Max 2,400 4,800 2,048 Wh
50.7 lbs
Heavy carry
Fail N/A View
Explorer 2000 v2 2,200 4,400 2,042 Wh
39.5 lbs
One-person carry
Fail N/A View
Yeti 1500X 2,000 3,500 1,516 Wh
45.6 lbs
Heavy carry
Fail N/A View
DELTA (Gen 1) 1,800 3,300 1,260 Wh
30.9 lbs
One-person carry
Fail N/A View
AC180 1,800 2,700 1,152 Wh
36.2 lbs
One-person carry
Fail N/A View
Explorer 1000 v2 1,500 3,000 1,070 Wh
23.8 lbs
One-person carry
Fail N/A View
SOLIX C1000 1,800 2,400 1,056 Wh
28.4 lbs
One-person carry
Fail N/A View
DELTA 2 1,800 2,700 1,024 Wh
26.5 lbs
One-person carry
Fail N/A View
DELTA 3 Plus 1,800 3,600 1,024 Wh
27.6 lbs
One-person carry
Fail N/A View
VTOMAN Jump 1500X 1,500 3,000 828 Wh
36.2 lbs
One-person carry
Fail N/A View
SOLIX C800 Plus 1,200 1,600 768 Wh
24.0 lbs
One-person carry
Fail N/A View
AC70 1,000 2,000 768 Wh
22.5 lbs
One-person carry
Fail N/A View
RIVER 2 Pro 800 1,600 768 Wh
18.3 lbs
Easy carry
Fail N/A View
Explorer 500 500 1,000 518.4 Wh
13.2 lbs
Easy carry
Fail N/A View
RIVER 2 Max 500 1,000 512 Wh
13.4 lbs
Easy carry
Fail N/A View
SOLIX C300 300 300 288 Wh
9.0 lbs
Easy carry
Fail N/A View
Explorer 300 Plus 300 600 288 Wh
8.4 lbs
Easy carry
Fail N/A View
EB3A 600 1,200 268.8 Wh
10.1 lbs
Easy carry
Fail N/A View
RIVER 2 300 600 256 Wh
7.7 lbs
Easy carry
Fail N/A View
RIVER 3 300 600 245 Wh
7.7 lbs
Easy carry
Fail N/A View

Why 73% of Power Stations Fail

24 of 33 generators tested cannot safely run this device. Here's why.

Startup surge too high

The Electric Chainsaw (14-inch) draws 5,220W at startup, 3.0× its running watts. Most portable power stations can't handle this inrush.

Model Variants

Different models have different power requirements. Check the specific report for your exact model.

WORX WG305.1 (14-inch, 8A, Budget)

Running: 960W
Surge: 2,880W
See compatibility report

Greenworks 20222 (14-inch, 10.5A)

Running: 1,260W
Surge: 3,780W
See compatibility report

Makita UC3551A (14-inch, 14.5A, Heavy-Duty)

Running: 1,740W
Surge: 5,220W
See compatibility report

Frequently Asked Questions

How many power stations can run a Electric Chainsaw (14-inch)?

Out of 33 portable power stations we tested, 9 can safely run a Electric Chainsaw (14-inch) (7 with full safety margin, 2 at tight margin). 24 are incompatible.

What specs should I look for to run a Electric Chainsaw (14-inch)?

Your power station needs at least 1,740W continuous output and 5,220W surge capacity. We recommend a safety buffer of 15% above these minimums for reliable operation.

How do we test compatibility?

Every pairing is evaluated using our True Surge protocol: we compare OEM-verified running watts, surge watts, and voltage requirements against each power station's published specs, with load-profile-specific safety buffers applied. Read our full methodology.

What size power station do I need for an electric chainsaw?

Only if your power source can supply at least 1740W continuous and 5220W surge at 120V. Lower-amperage models (8A) are significantly more compatible with mid-range power stations.

Compare these models

Side-by-side comparisons for the top picks on this page.