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No โ€” voltage mismatch between the Explorer 1000 v2 and a Well Pump

Hard no: this device is 240V only, and the generator does not supply that output.

  • โ€ข Voltage mismatch: device needs 240V, generator output is 120V.

Power Margin Analysis

1500W / 3000W Capacity
Running 1251W short
2751W required
Surge 5253W short
8253W required

Decision Gate Waterfall

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

Blocking reason: voltage mismatch. Downstream gates are paused until voltage is compatible.

1

Voltage Gate

FAIL

Device output type must match generator output.

240V required -> 120V available

2

Running Gate

N/A

Continuous draw with safety buffer applied.

Blocked by voltage mismatch.

3

Surge Gate

N/A

Startup peak with safety buffer applied.

Blocked by voltage mismatch.

4

Runtime Insight

INFO

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

N/A due to voltage mismatch.

Power bars show required versus available output for each gate.

See generators that pass natively

Decision Snapshot

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

โšก
1500W
Running Power
๐Ÿ”‹
1070Wh
Capacity
โฑ๏ธ
โ€”
Est. Runtime
โ˜€๏ธ
400W
Solar Input

Quick Compatibility Check

  1. 1 Voltage: needs 240V, generator outputs 120V.
  2. 2 Fix: only a generator with 240V split-phase output will work.
  3. 3 Wattage cannot solve a voltage mismatch.

What To Do Instead

  1. 1 Voltage mismatch: The Well Pump (1 HP) requires 240V output. The Explorer 1000 v2 provides 120V only โ€” no amount of extra wattage can fix this.
  2. 2 What you need: A power station or generator with 240V split-phase output and at least 2751W continuous / 8253W surge.
  3. 3 Compatible alternative: The Anker SOLIX F3800 (6000W continuous, 120V/240V) meets this device's voltage and wattage requirements.

Model-Specific Results

0 of 3 models are SAFE or TIGHT. Most demanding model: Red Lion RL12G10-2W2V (1 HP Deep Well Submersible) (7,176W surge).

Model Running Surge Verdict Runtime Source
Wayne SWS100 (1 HP Shallow Well Jet Pump) 1,840W 5,520W Voltage Fail โ€” NEC Standard
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Technical: **Running load:** 1840W using NEC full-load current for a 1 HP single-phase motor at 230V. **Startup surge:** 5520W estimated with a 3x motor inrush multiplier. **Voltage:** 240V required in normal US installation.

Field note: Wayne publishes HP and voltage, but not FLA/LRA for SWS100. Sizing is intentionally conservative using NEC motor tables.

Can a portable power station run the Wayne SWS100?

Only if it provides 240V output and can handle about 1840W continuous plus a 5520W startup spike.

Red Lion RL12G10-2W2V (1 HP Deep Well Submersible) 2,392W 7,176W Voltage Fail โ€” NEC Standard
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Technical: **Running load:** 2392W from OEM voltage/current data (230V ร— 10.4A). **Startup surge:** 7176W estimated at 3ร— running per NEC 430.248 due to high-inrush induction motor behavior. **Voltage:** 240V required.

Field note: This is the battery-killer profile in the set: high running watts plus very high startup inrush.

Why does this Red Lion model fail on many power stations?

Because the startup surge is very high relative to consumer inverter surge limits, even when continuous watts look close.

Grundfos 15SQ10-220 (SQ Series Soft Start) 1,702W 2,553W Voltage Fail โ€” Engineering Est.
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Technical: **Running load:** 1702W from OEM full-load amps. **Estimated startup surge:** 2553W using a 1.5x soft-start assumption. **Voltage:** 240V required.

Field note: This is the generator-friendly profile in the set: still a 240V well-pump load, but with meaningfully lower startup demand.

Is the Grundfos SQ easier on battery inverters than standard well pumps?

Generally yes, because the SQ line uses soft-start behavior that lowers startup inrush compared with hard-start 1 HP pumps.

How This Pairing Performs Across Our Database

This unit is outside the compatible set; 4 of 33 generators pass SAFE/TIGHT for this device.

How Well Pump (1 HP) Performs Across 33 Tested Generators

4 of 33 generators are SAFE+TIGHT for Well Pump (1 HP).

4 Safe+Tight
Safe 3 (9%)
Tight 1 (3%)
Soft Start 1 (3%)
Voltage Fail 28 (85%)

Power Comparison: Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 vs Top Alternatives for Well Pump (1 HP)

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

Specs & Surge Analysis

True Surgeโ„ข Analysis

Safety Buffer: +15%
Running Power Usage 183% Utilization
2751W required 1500W Capacity
1251W short
Surge/Startup Peak 275% Utilization
8253W required 3000W Capacity
5253W short
Voltage Match 240V โ†” 120V โœ•

Startup Surge Visual

โš ๏ธ Before You Buy: Connection Check
High-voltage device

This device typically needs 240V split-phase or a hardwired connection. Most portable stations are 120V-only. Verify the plug type and voltage on the device label/manual before purchase.

Installation warning

These systems are often hardwired to a home panel. To run them from a portable station, you may need a transfer switch installed by an electrician. You cannot just plug it in.

Compatible Alternatives to Explorer 1000 v2

These generators meet Well Pump (1 HP)'s voltage, running, and surge requirements.

Best Value Anker SOLIX F3800

Anker SOLIX F3800

6000W โ€ข 3840Wh

Runtime at your load
~1.1h
Capacity Fit Fixed 3840Wh

Lowest capacity that still clears surge + running load.

Max Runtime Delta Pro Ultra X

Delta Pro Ultra X

12000W โ€ข 6144Wh

Runtime at your load
~1.8h
Longest Runtime Fixed 6144Wh

Highest available capacity for longer runtime.

Generator Insights

This unit can handle typical compressor-based loads like refrigerators and window AC units where startup surge falls within the 3000W envelope. The 1070Wh capacity supports moderate runtime on continuous loads under 1500W. It can start most residential sump pumps and small well pumps where inrush demand does not exceed the rated surge threshold.

LFP chemistry provides a stable platform for managing high-current transients during motor startup events. The 3000W surge rating allows the unit to absorb brief inrush currents without shutdown, though users must verify compatibility with specific appliances. Source: Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 User Manual (Sept 2024) (manufacturer documentation).

Technical Analysis

Spec-Based โ€ข No Guarantees

Technical Breakdown

Running range: 1702W to 2392W across common 1 HP well pump designs. Startup range: 2553W to 7176W depending on motor/start behavior. Voltage: 240V class load in typical US installations.

Expected Behavior

Typical duty cycle is about 2 hours/day, with short frequent cycles. Daily energy falls around 3404 to 4784Wh depending on the model.

Field Note

For well pumps, startup behavior matters more than nameplate HP. A soft-start design can change a borderline pairing into a stable one.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 power a Well Pump?

No. The Well Pump (1 HP) requires 240V output, but the Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 provides 120V only. No amount of extra wattage can fix a voltage mismatch โ€” you need a power source with 240V split-phase output.

How long will the Explorer 1000 v2 run a Well Pump?

No reliable runtime estimate โ€” this pairing is not compatible. The Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 cannot safely power the Well Pump (1 HP). See compatible alternatives above for power stations that meet this device's requirements.

Power Tip: To get the most out of your Explorer 1000 v2, 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 Well Pump (1 HP)

Ranked by budget, runtime, and overall compatibility.

See full ranking
Technical Sourcing & Verification
ID: jackery-explorer-1000-v2-well-pump-1hp
๐Ÿ›๏ธ Device Data Source
Engineering Est. Safety Factor Applied

Derived from variant list (max of variants). Worst case = Red Lion RL12G10-2W2V (2392W running, 7176W surge).

โšก Generator Specs Source
OEM Verified

Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 User Manual (Sept 2024)

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

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