This is just a note for those of us who looked at this thing and thought “That doesn’t look like the usual rugged Milwaukee Body Plastic for their tools! What happened!”ĭon’t be stupid like me. The best one appears to be the one hanging off the cart. Just… For my own sanity… The reason this thing LOOKS awful, is because the images on WHITE are RENDERINGS… The Photos of it in action look SIGNIFICANTLY better. Overall, I’d say that the Top-Off seems like a nicely balanced jobsite-friendly design. The pricing is very different – $260 for the Anker and $99 for the Top-Off plus the price of whatever M18 battery you want to power it with.Ĭompare: Anker Battery Generator via Amazon The Milwaukee Top-Off can deliver 175W via AC, 45W via USB-C PD, and 2.4A via USB-A (~12W). It recharges via included AC adapter, optional USB-C PD charger, or optional DC output solar charger. The Anker has a display and polished consumer-friendly enclosure. All together, the Anker can deliver a maximum power output of 100W. Its AC port can deliver 100W max, and its car outlet port 60W max. Its USB-C port can deliver 30W max, and its USB-A ports 15W max (likely combined). The Anker has more ports – a 12V auto DC port and a second USB-A port. It features 213Wh of charge capacity, or nearly the equivalent of a Milwaukee M18 HD 12.0Ah battery (216 Wh). ![]() Let’s take a look at that model, for context. ![]() Perhaps the closest comparison to the Milwaukee M18 Top-Off is the Anker Powerhouse 200. There aren’t a lot of battery-powered multi-port and AC port adapters out there.
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