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Yes, the SOLIX C800 Plus can run a Portable Ice Maker

Yes - SOLIX C800 Plus has enough running and surge power for the Portable Ice Maker (Countertop). Target ~450W running / 1350W surge; the generator provides 1200W / 1600W.

Power Margin Analysis

1200W / 1600W Capacity
Running 750W headroom
450W required
Surge 250W headroom
1350W required

Decision Gate Waterfall

Same decision gates as the engine: voltage, running, surge. Runtime is shown as operational context.

1

Voltage Gate

PASS

Device output type must match generator output.

120V required -> 120V available

2

Running Gate

PASS

Continuous draw with safety buffer applied.

450W required -> 1,200W available (750W headroom)

Required 450W required
Available 1,200W
3

Surge Gate

PASS

Startup peak with safety buffer applied.

1,350W required -> 1,600W available (250W headroom)

Required 1,350W required
Available 1,600W
4

Runtime Insight

INFO

Runtime context only. It does not change the electrical compatibility verdict.

Continuous estimate: 1.5h

Device profile reference: up to 4h per day.

Power bars show required versus available output for each gate.

View full compatibility report

Decision Snapshot

Quick compatibility, required headroom, and model-specific context at a glance.

โšก
1200W
Running Power
๐Ÿ”‹
768Wh
Capacity
โฑ๏ธ
~1.5h
Est. Runtime
โ˜€๏ธ
300W
Solar Input

Quick Compatibility Check

  1. 1 Running headroom: target 450W; generator provides 1200W.
  2. 2 Surge headroom: target 1350W; generator provides 1600W.
  3. 3 Tip: leave headroom for startup spikes and warm conditions.

Model-Specific Results

3 of 3 models are SAFE or TIGHT. Most demanding model: GE Profile Opal 2.0 (XPIO13SCSS) โ€” Nugget (1,080W surge).

Model Running Surge Verdict Runtime Source
GE Profile Opal 2.0 (XPIO13SCSS) โ€” Nugget 360W 1,080W Safe ~1.5h OEM Verified
Show expert analysis

Technical: The Opal 2.0 is the highest-draw variant in this set at 360W. Unlike basic bullet ice makers, nugget models use both a compressor and an auger to crush and form chewable ice, pushing power demand well above the 100โ€“120W typical of bullet units.

Field note: At 360W this is not the lightweight camping load many expect. Verify your station can sustain it before hauling it to a tailgate โ€” a 500W station works, but leaves little headroom for anything else.

Can a portable power station run a countertop ice maker?

Yes โ€” the worst-case countertop ice maker in our set draws 360W running with an estimated 1080W startup surge. Any station rated above that threshold handles even the most power-hungry nugget models. Simpler bullet-style makers draw far less. Startup surge is modest (3x running) and rarely the bottleneck โ€” battery capacity determines session length, not whether you can start the machine.

Frigidaire EFIC189-Silver โ€” Bullet 105W 315W Safe ~5.1h OEM Manual
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Technical: A basic bullet ice maker drawing only 105W. The small hermetic compressor produces minimal startup inrush โ€” estimated at 315W, well within reach of even the smallest portable power stations.

Field note: At 105W this pairs with virtually any power station in the catalog. The real camping question is runtime: a 300Wh station gives roughly 2 hours of active ice production before needing a recharge.

Can a portable power station run a countertop ice maker?

Yes โ€” the worst-case countertop ice maker in our set draws 360W running with an estimated 1080W startup surge. Any station rated above that threshold handles even the most power-hungry nugget models. Simpler bullet-style makers draw far less. Startup surge is modest (3x running) and rarely the bottleneck โ€” battery capacity determines session length, not whether you can start the machine.

Igloo IGLICEB26HNSS โ€” Bullet 120W 360W Safe ~4.5h OEM Manual
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Technical: A 120W bullet ice maker with a carry handle designed for portability. Draws 2A at 120V with a small hermetic R134a compressor producing minimal startup inrush.

Field note: The carry handle and light weight make this the most camping-friendly option in the set. Pair it with a mid-range station (500Wh+) for a full afternoon of ice at a campsite.

Can a portable power station run a countertop ice maker?

Yes โ€” the worst-case countertop ice maker in our set draws 360W running with an estimated 1080W startup surge. Any station rated above that threshold handles even the most power-hungry nugget models. Simpler bullet-style makers draw far less. Startup surge is modest (3x running) and rarely the bottleneck โ€” battery capacity determines session length, not whether you can start the machine.

How This Pairing Performs Across Our Database

This unit ranks #3 of 27 compatible generators for this device by buffered margin (Overkill class).

How Portable Ice Maker (Countertop) Performs Across 33 Tested Generators

27 of 33 generators are SAFE+TIGHT for Portable Ice Maker (Countertop).

27 Safe+Tight
Safe 26 (79%)
Tight 1 (3%)
Fail 6 (18%)

Power Comparison: Anker SOLIX C800 Plus vs Top Alternatives for Portable Ice Maker (Countertop)

Fit class uses buffered needs (running and surge) for this device.

Specs & Surge Analysis

โšก
Outdoor & RV

Portable Ice Maker (Countertop)

Outdoor Ice Making / Tailgating

360W
Running
1080W
Surge
120V
Required

True Surgeโ„ข Analysis

Safety Buffer: +25%
Running Power Usage 38% Utilization
450W required 1200W Capacity
750W headroom
Surge/Startup Peak 84% Utilization
1350W required 1600W Capacity
250W headroom
Voltage Match 120V โ†” 120V โœ“

Generator Insights

The 1600W surge rating can support startup sequences for refrigerator compressors, well pumps, and similar inductive motor loads that draw 25 to 33 percent over running current during initial engagement. Once running, the 1200W continuous output can handle typical kitchen appliances, electronics, and power tools within rated limits. This combination addresses both inrush events and sustained runtime needs in backup scenarios.

This unit uses LFP chemistry, a battery architecture chosen for thermal stability in consumer power stations. The 768Wh capacity and 1200W continuous output allow sustained operation without thermal stress under typical residential loads. Source: Anker SOLIX C800 Plus Tech Specs (manufacturer documentation).

Extend Runtime with Solar

Keep your Portable Ice Maker (Countertop) running with solar โ€ข MPPT: 11โ€“ 60V โ€ข Max: 300W

Anker undefined Official

Anker

100W Panel

1 Hour Sun =
+0.2h per sun hour
MC4 -> XT60
Full in ~11h

Adapter required: MC4 -> XT60.

Bluetti undefined Smart Value

Bluetti

200W Panel

1 Hour Sun =
+0.4h per sun hour
MC4 -> XT60
Full in ~5.5h

Adapter required: MC4 -> XT60.

BougeRV undefined Smart Value

BougeRV

200W Panel

1 Hour Sun =
+0.4h per sun hour
MC4 -> XT60
Full in ~5.5h

Adapter required: MC4 -> XT60.

Technical Analysis

Spec-Based โ€ข No Guarantees

Technical Breakdown

Portable ice makers span a wide wattage range: basic bullet models draw 100-120W while nugget ice makers like the GE Opal reach 360W. All use small hermetic compressors with estimated 3x startup surge. The parent profile uses the highest variant to prevent under-sizing.

Expected Behavior

Estimated runtime: ~1.5h. Ice production cycles on and off โ€” the compressor runs for a few minutes, rests while ice forms, then restarts. Average power over a session is lower than peak rated watts, extending effective runtime on battery.

Field Note

Know which type you have before sizing your station. A bullet maker (100-120W) runs all day on a mid-range battery. A nugget maker (360W) needs a station with at least 500W continuous output and enough capacity for the session length you want.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the Anker SOLIX C800 Plus power a Portable Ice Maker?

Yes. The Anker SOLIX C800 Plus provides 1200W running / 1600W surge. The Portable Ice Maker (Countertop) needs 450W / 1350W (including 25% buffer). That leaves 750W of running headroom and 250W of surge margin.

How long will the SOLIX C800 Plus run a Portable Ice Maker?

Approximately 1.5 hours, based on the Portable Ice Maker (Countertop)'s 360W draw and the SOLIX C800 Plus's 768Wh capacity (70% usable after real-world losses).

What Else Can You Run?

With 255W allocated to the Portable Ice Maker (Countertop), the SOLIX C800 Plus still has ~345W of margin. These devices could run simultaneously:

๐Ÿ’ก
LED Lamp
10W
๐ŸŒ€
Box Fan (Medium)
60W
๐Ÿ“บ
55' LED TV
80W
๐ŸŒฌ๏ธ
Nebulizer
60W
๐Ÿ–ฅ๏ธ
24' Monitor
30W
๐Ÿ“ก
Wifi Router
15W

Power Tip: To get the most out of your SOLIX C800 Plus, keep it in a well-ventilated area. Extreme temperatures can slightly reduce the efficiency of the LFP/NMC cells.

Compare all 33 generators for the Portable Ice Maker (Countertop)

Ranked by budget, runtime, and overall compatibility.

See full ranking
Technical Sourcing & Verification
ID: anker-solix-c800-plus-portable-ice-maker
๐Ÿ›๏ธ Device Data Source
Engineering Est. Safety Factor Applied

Derived from variant list (max of variants). Running worst case = GE Profile Opal 2.0 XPIO13SCSS (360W OEM from geappliances.com spec page). Surge worst case = GE Profile Opal 2.0 (1080W, 3x compressor startup estimate โ€” no OEM LRA published for any variant).

โšก Generator Specs Source
OEM Verified

Anker SOLIX C800 Plus User Manual (EN-US)

Methodology informed by US Department of Energy (DOE) & EIA references where applicable. Our methodology โ†’

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