






⚡ Power Up Your Adventures!
The Ego 56v. Nexus Escape 150-Watt Power Inverter PAD1500 is a versatile, battery-powered inverter designed to keep your devices charged while on the move or during power outages. Weighing just 530.7g and compatible with any EGO battery, it’s the perfect solution for powering everything from laptops to lamps.








| Product Dimensions | 18.54 x 12.7 x 7.37 cm; 530.7 g |
| Part number | PAD1500 |
| Power source type | Battery Powered |
| Manufacturer | EGO Power+ |
| Item model number | PAD1500 |
| ASIN | B07HCGMPZC |
C**
Égo power
Module fonctionnel en camping quant il y'a panne électrique .
S**T
Misleading product information !!!
This is a fine product, but crucially important information was left out in all descriptions, that this is NOT a pure sine wave inverter as the linked manual implies it is. The linked manual is for PAD 5000 (pure sine wave), but this product is PAD 1500 (output often called "modified sine wave", which is a lie. It has a square wave output that approximates a sine wave). Many people have used a non-RMS voltmeter to measure approximately 80V output from this product, however, those people did not understand that it's the simplified waveform coming from this device that measures as 80V in a non-RMS meter. If they were to connect this to an RMS voltmeter, it would indicate 120Vrms.This product, the PAD 1500, is absolutely NOT compatible with a number of different load devices. Problems range from operational malfunction to destruction as in the kil-a-watt, smoked motor and burned out night light examples from reviews.There should be extensive caution information in description of this product about what devices it may damage if you use this inverter to power them. It isn't just the Watts rating you need to worry about. You must also know whether any inverter is producing a waveform like what you get from public utilities AC power, or a pseudo-sine wave as a modified square wave from the PAD 1500.One further issue much lower in severity is that this inverter has no headroom or starting surge capability to speak of. This means that any device which requires a high inrush current will not operate from this inverter at all, even though it may take well under the 150W spec power that this device can provide.I found all this out by purchasing this product and immediately observing that it wouldn't even run a small fan. The loud noise that it caused the fan to make was a smoking gun that this was not a pure sine wave inverter. I returned this product and I contacted both EGO the manufacturer, and Amazon to plead with them to correct this absent information and the downright incorrect user manual information on the product page, and they have modified absolutely NOTHING in the months that followed.
M**A
great device
I live in the Bay Area and the power outages are becoming regular occurrence. So i bought this and it has been incredibly useful during this most recent and ongoing outage. It is pure sine wave so it powers my sony 50" tv, and anything else 150 watts and below. Not sure why someone described it as glorified laptop powering station. I would highly recommend this for anyone with existing Ego batteries. The price is not unreasonable, particularly since the inferior Ryobi 40 volt system inverter is the same price.With a little more usage of the device, I should point out that I was not able to power up my Sony 50 inch TV with the 2.5 amp battery. The 5.0 worked well. I believe you will find all these specs in the description of the product. A smaller TV might be OK with 2.5 amps.The fast charger requires wattage of 550 which will require a generator or powerful car inverter. the slower charger is 155 watts, which worked with my Bestek 500 watt inverter with a bunch of things running on it.The one small detractor is it doesn't seem to turn itself completely off when not used. There is an easy on off switch, but if you just unplug something and let is sit there, I think the battery drains a bit. There is only AC plug. The two USB outlets you could do without given all the options that exist to charge your phone or iPadI just bought another one. You can't match the portability and its fine for most indoor stuff you'll need to keep running during a power outage under 24 hours. Beyond that, this won't run important stuff like a microwave, etc. But you can plug in your modem/router, cable box, and TV since it puts out a pure (as opposed to modified) sine wave. And a table lamp on top of that. just need to split the one AC plug on it.
J**.
Lower your expectations, and it's just fine.
This is a review of the 150w model.The size is great. Fits in my glovebox or under the seat. Even without a snap to lock the battery in place, it never fell out when carrying it. Everyone else was impressed by the size, and usability.Power output of this square wave inverter will cause several brands of LED's to buzz and be dimmer than expected. My 2* 100w (15w) LED's (the picture that shows as 30w consumed when plugged into regular wall power) will only work at half capacity, ~60w (6w), (the picture which shows 12w consumed when plugged into regular wall power) etc. Also, I noticed the power meter couldn't tell the frequency of the output, just stating DC instead of the usual 59.9 hertz) For many folks this might be a downside. For my purpose as a camping power source to replace gas lamps and flashlights with something brighter but not too bright, it worked great. The half power LED actually doubled the battery life I calculated. Same as if the LED's had dimmers on them, or using lower rated bulbs. It remains to be seen if the power problem equals drastically shorter life of the LED's though. Also, because the LED's took less power, We were able to power speakers and phone chargers all at the same time from a power strip.It powers air mattress inflator/deflators just fine, you can hear the motor is a bit slower, but nobody really noticed the time difference. The iPhone fast charger using the 20w usb c adapter was noticeably slower, but still better than regular usb speed.There is no remaining capacity indicator on the device. It would be much better with a minutes runtime remaining, that almost all UPS battery backups have. The green light is good on my EGO's for about 5% - 100% of the battery. The 5 led EGO battery gauge on some batteries is not reliable for predicting time increments. It took 3 hours for the first led to go out, and 30 minutes for the second led, 1 hour for the 3rd led, etc. Same load constant.In all it was a good purchase for my use case, but misleading advertising to not place disclaimers on the box about what it's not going to work with. I expect many unhappy customers expecting it to be the same as a generator, or pure sine wave UPS's.
S**N
East to Set up. Plug and Play.
With a charged EGO battery, you will only need less than five minutes to set up.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
1 month ago