Patriot Power Solar Generator AlphaCase Elite hard case open, showing the 4Patriots logo and foam-lined interior

The Patriot Power Solar Generator AlphaCase Elite is 4Patriots' answer to a problem every solar generator owner eventually hits: how do I store this thing till I need it! It's a 736-watt-hour LiFePO4 power station and a 60-watt folding solar panel that packs into a single rugged, weather-resistant case about the size of a large briefcase. I've tested a handful of solar generators, and this is the first one designed around how you actually live with it and that's a really great thing.

How To Buy the Patriot Power Solar Generator AlphaCase Elite

The Patriot Power Solar Generator AlphaCase Elite & Solar Panel is available direct from 4Patriots for $1,099.95, which includes the generator, the 60W solar panel, an AlphaCase flashlight, and the charging cords - all stored inside the case.

I live in Southwest Michigan, right on Lake Michigan, where summer storms roll in fast and take the power with them. Backup power isn't a convenience at our place - it's a requirement. Here's how the AlphaCase Elite held up.

A Rugged Case Instead of a Box and a Bag

Most solar generators are a blocky power station plus a separate zippered bag for the panel, and the two never live in the same place. The AlphaCase Elite skips that. The power station, the 60-watt folding panel, the flashlight, and every cord pack into one hard-sided case with a honeycomb-textured lid, only about 4.5 inches thick. Closed up, it looks more like a spy's briefcase than a battery bank - a little James Bond, and I mean that as a compliment. That styling sounds like a gimmick until you go to store it.

Mine slides onto a closet shelf and would tuck into a tornado shelter without a fight, it's light enough to toss in the truck for a tailgate or haul to the cabin for a weekend with the guys, and when I want it I grab one handle and everything comes with it. No other solar generator I've tested ships the panel and the power station in one case.

Honestly, I'm impressed with 4Patriots and we'll be talking more about them and their practical prepping gear more over the next several months as well.

 

Clean Power for a CPAP When the Grid Goes Down

The reason I care about backup power at all comes down to two machines. Heather and I both have sleep apnea, so a CPAP and a BiPAP run in our house every night, and a dead outlet at 2 a.m. isn't an option. The pure sine wave inverter matters here - medical devices want clean power, not the choppy output some cheaper units push. With 736 watt-hours in the tank and 800 watts of continuous output (1,600 surge), it covers both machines for a night with enough left over for our phones and a couple of lights. The LiFePO4 battery is rated for 4,000-plus cycles, so it's not a unit you replace in two years.

736 Watt-Hours and What Else Is in the Case

The case design is the real story, but the spec sheet holds up too. Here's what you get:

  • Battery - 736Wh LiFePO4, rated for 4,000+ charge cycles
  • Output - 800W continuous, 1,600W surge, pure sine wave
  • Ports - 2 AC outlets, 2 USB-A (18W), 2 USB-C (up to 100W), 2 12V DC barrel, 1 12V cigarette outlet
  • Solar panel - 60W foldable, with its own USB-A and USB-C ports
  • Recharge - about 1 hour from a wall outlet, roughly 15 hours from the 60W panel
  • Weight - about 35 pounds packed
  • In the case - generator, 60W panel, AlphaCase flashlight, charging cords, manual
  • Warranty - 365-day satisfaction guarantee, 90-day return window

Two honest caveats. At 736 watt-hours, this is a devices-and-medical backup, not a whole-house generator - it'll keep your CPAP, phones, and lights alive, but it won't run a refrigerator (they have Backup Buddy for that!) or a window AC. And the 60-watt panel is a trickle: a full solar recharge takes around 15 hours of good sun, so in practice you top off from the wall before a storm and let the panel stretch a multi-day outage.

A Battery Backup Is Only As Good As The Operator Using It

This is a great unit, one I heartily recomend if you are looking for a solar power station as a true backup - vs something you'll be keeping active for ultility power. However, it's ultimately only as good as the person operating it. That includes making sure it is charged up and that you test it periodically to make sure everything is working properly.

At $1,099.95 the AlphaCase Elite isn't the cheapest 736-watt-hour unit on the shelf, and if you only want raw watt-hours per dollar for car camping or a guys trip, a bare power station and a separate panel will cost less. But none of those keep the panel, the cords, and a flashlight in one grab-and-go case - and for medical backup that sits in a closet 360 days a year, that's exactly what I'm paying for. For current pricing and the full spec list, check the Patriot Power Solar Generator AlphaCase Elite & Solar Panel at 4Patriots.