








☀️ Charge smarter, travel lighter, and never miss a beat outdoors!
The Lixada 10W Monocrystalline Silicon Solar Panel Charger delivers high-efficiency solar charging in a sleek, ultra-portable design. Measuring just 8.1" by 5.6" and weighing under 3 ounces, it fits seamlessly into your daily carry. With a 22-23% photoelectric conversion rate and a durable frosted surface, it offers reliable, battery-free power for smartphones and USB devices during camping, climbing, or travel—empowering your on-the-go lifestyle with sustainable energy.






| AC Adapter Current | 1200 Milliamps |
| ASIN | B06Y655DJD |
| Batteries Included? | No |
| Batteries Required? | No |
| Battery Cell Type | Lithium |
| Best Sellers Rank | #195,966 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ( See Top 100 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ) #805 in Solar Panels |
| Brand | Lixada |
| Color | 10W |
| Customer Reviews | 3.2 3.2 out of 5 stars (168) |
| Date First Available | April 11, 2017 |
| Efficiency | High Efficiency |
| Included Components | Solar panel |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 2.88 ounces |
| Item model number | 4326541180 |
| Manufacturer | LIXADA |
| Material | Monocrystalline Silicon |
| Maximum Power | 10 Watts |
| Maximum Voltage | 5 Volts |
| Mounting Type | Tabletop Mount |
| Output Voltage | 6.8 Volts (DC) |
| Part Number | PZV9844593698872IV |
| Power Source | Battery Powered,Corded Electric |
| Product Dimensions | 8.1"L x 5.6"W x 0.3"H |
| Size | Size2 |
| Special Feature | Travel |
| Special Features | Travel |
| Style | Battery |
| UPC | 738920392683 |
| Wattage | 10 watts |
B**E
Tiny! Works! (so far) charges a smartphone
Read the other reviews and decided to give this a go. So far so good, on day one. At first I left my phone (Moto X) in the sun under the shade of the device and it charged really nicely, until the phone overheated and stopped charging. When I moved my phone into some real shade and left the Lixada panel in the full California mid-day sun, the phone charged from 50% to 100% in a bit more than an hour. This is replacing a larger 10W panel that died, before it broke it was performing about the same, so I'm happy with the rate of this device. It is tiny, compact, and seems well-enough made. Interested to see how it performs on an upcoming week long trip in a small sailboat. UPDATE: after three weeks, the Lixada is still working. Using it daily to charge my phone. Takes 3-4 hours to go from near empty to near full. Took it on a trip packed in a book, it didn't break. So far so good for this tiny inexpensive lightweight solar USB charger. UPDATE: now 4 months later, using this almost every day to charge my phone, still working Update: 3 years later... The market has changed... "Solar chargers" Batteries with solar panels are now a thing, and pretty cheap... But this Lixada keeps ticking. One corner bent and it still works
T**S
10W is BS
Hooked this thing up to a Nitecore 10K power bank that was a little over 25% discharged. Kept in full sun here in southern California for 2 days and wondered why it was still charging. If it was a 10W solar panel it should be putting out 2 amps at 5 volts, which would be more than enough to charge even a 50% discharged 10K power bank in 2 days of full sun. So, I reordered from my first order to get another one to compare. Second one arrived, different dimensions, connector on different side, and it came with 2 caribiners, which the first one did not have. What the heck??? Hooked both up, since the nitecore has 2 usb charge input/outputs. Verified that each panel was delivering power by checking each with the other disconnected. Day 3, things are still charging in full sun. A little research reveals that you can reasonably expect about 70 mW per square inch from a typical solar panel. Let's be charitable and say these panels can produce 100 mW per square inch. The first panel I got has some blank lines running through it and is slightly larger than the second panel, which has no lines. Measuring the cell areas: #1 measures 8.5 x 5 inches. #2 measures 8 x 5". Let's say they are both 8 x 5 since the bigger one loses some area with the lines. That's 40 square inches per panel. 100 mW/square inch x 40 square inches gives 4 Watts. So, being charitable these panels at best produce 4 watts. So it's frankly BS to call them 10 watt panels. Add in all the other inefficiencies of charging a power bank and then using the power bank to recharge a phone, for example, and you've got a really ineffective solution. Makes me really wonder about some of the reviews on here.
J**G
THE panel for Appalachian Trail hikers!
Attention AT hikers, if you want a panel to take with you on your hike, this is the one. First, the reason for the 3 out of 5 star rating. One simple reason, this is described as a 10 watt solar panel. It is not. The maximum I have recorded (out of multiple tests) was around 3.5 watts. This is a 5 watt panel, not a 10 watt panel, and that is being generous. That is the reason for the lower rating. If this company would change the description from 10 watt to 5 watt, I would give all 5 stars. As a 10 watt panel, it is 3 stars, but 5 star 5 watt panel. One last con is the usb port which others have covered. Supposedly it comes off easily when the panel gets hot because of the glue they use. I cannot vouch for this because as soon as I received it I put some superglue around the usb port, and no matter how hot the panel gets it's on there solidly. Now for all the pros, and there are many. First, this seems very well constructed. It is tough and very light. Second, the total weight for the panel, not including any charge cord, is an amazing 2 7/8 oz. Yep, under 3oz, and that's it and that's why I recommend for AT hikers. Ultralite. Even with me adding a little superglue around the usb port, it didn't affect the weight. Still 2 7/8 oz. Third, even though it only maxes out at 3.5 watts, that is plenty to keep your phone charged. By my estimation, 3.5 hours of full sun with this panel will completely charge my I phone. It can charge a 5000mah battery in 5.75 hours (enough to charge my phone 1.7 times) and a 10000mah battery in 11-12 hours. I recommend the battery. Don't charge your phone directly from the panel, because the charge fluctuates constantly and I wouldn't recommend that for a phone battery. Let a regular $10 5000mah battery take that beating and protect your phone battery. Fourth, the price. $20. Totally worth it for a 5 watt panel this well made. For hiking, I use this panel (82g, 2 7/8 oz), a 10,000mah battery (187g, 6 5/8oz), two braided 12" charge cords, one micro-usb and one apple for my iPhone (26g 7/8oz), and a wall plug adapter with usb port (36g, 1 1/4oz). Obviously the plug is for when I hit town and can charge my phone and battery up quickly. You will need the micro-usb cord to charge the battery from the panel, and also to charge most devices from the battery. I have an iPhone so I also need the apple charge cord. This makes a total of 331g, or 11.675oz. Not bad to keep your phone charged. I start out with a full charge, and the 10000mah battery holds 3 charges. With the panel I can be out for weeks and keep my phone going. If you want to go with the smaller 5000mah battery, that is 1.7 charges and knock of 3 oz from the total weight (8.675oz). If you have decent sun that would probably work too. I attach the panel to the back of my pack and put the battery in a pocket to protect it from the sun with the charge cord between them. To sum up, the only issues are the usb port (easily fixed) and listing this as a 10 watt panel when it can barely qualify as a 5 watt. Other than that, affordable, well constructed, tough and ultralite. I highly recommend this panel, especially for hikers watching their pack weight. My only recommendations are, use better glue on the usb port, and change description from 10 watt to 5 watt.
O**C
Great product, lightweight and it works.
I'm still testing it but I've taken it out on a couple of hikes and charged up my 10k charger by one bar during a day hike. The size is weight is good and my plan is to use for backpacking but I haven't done any overnights with it yet. I used a couple of straps and attached to the loops on the panel and was able to easily lay on the top of my pack as I was hiking. I've had my hiking partner move a big from one side to another to capture as much sun as possible. Also, don't plug directly into your phone, it will use more battery than charge because every time it gets enough light to charge, it turns on your phone display. Connect to your batter. This is a great deal and does a lot more than I would expect for just a few dollars. I recommend this.
K**T
This is not a 10W panel. This might not even be a 5W panel. Measurements taken with panel perpendicular to Sun in Toronto, ON, Canada, mid-September at roughly 10:30AM EST, clear skies. Relatively favourable conditions and only 2.3W measured max output (2.07W in photo). If you were going to use this for camping, I wouldn't expect any better than this. Most phone batteries are 10-20 watt-hours, (2W output for 10hrs would give you 20). You'll lose 10-20% efficiency going from the battery bank to the phone, so you would need 8-10hrs of perfect sun (and angle the panel at the sun) to fully charge a phone every day, for example. If you shift the angle of the panel, power output drops dramatically, so if you hang this off your pack, you'll likely get less output as angle changes to less than perfect (perpendicular to Sun). I think it would be optimistic to expect 15 watt-hours out of this every day (assuming you have sunny conditions all day) if you're attaching this to a pack. You're gonna need to do some math if you want to depend on this out in the wild.
L**E
This works great attached to my backpack. It’s light as anything and charges my power bank back up to full every day. I have only had it in fine weather but has been fantastic so far. Would recommend
P**J
I purchased but not effective...try to with cell phone, Battery bank....but in 2-3 hrs ...not satisfied. Then try to return as per Amazon policy....but no one to pickup..So not solution
P**N
BEWARE This is solar panel is NOT capable of genersting 10 watts as advertised The solar panel does not produce 10 watts as its described (its nearer to 4-5 watts maximim generated on a bright sunny day). This solar panel will NOT charge a modern smart phone nor will it top up a battery powered CCTV. The advertising literature on the Amazon page misrepresents what it's actually capable of doing.
X**X
I think I've been through three of these. They've worked for about as many days before the socket fails.
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