








⚡ Power your freedom with clean, reliable energy—wherever life takes you!
The Renogy 2000W Pure Sine Wave Inverter converts 12V DC to 110V AC with over 90% efficiency, delivering clean, grid-quality power for home, RV, truck, or off-grid solar use. Featuring advanced safety protections, multiple outlets including USB, and a remote controller, it ensures your sensitive electronics run smoothly and safely. Durable metal housing and high-speed cooling fans guarantee reliable performance backed by ETL certification and a 1-year warranty.

















| ASIN | B07H9SXV61 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 194,060 in Business, Industry & Science ( See Top 100 in Business, Industry & Science ) 48 in Solar & Wind Energy Off-Grid Inverters |
| Item model number | RNG-INVT-2000-12V-P2 |
| Manufacturer | Renogy |
| Product Dimensions | 45.21 x 21.84 x 10.16 cm; 5.31 kg |
A**D
منتج ممتاز
A**R
Good product, but not enough power for using it in semi truck. It’s still usable for one microwave or freezer but for both of them on time- shut down every couple of minutes
P**D
so far so good
T**Y
I *also* own a Renogy 2kw combined charger/inverter. That unit has an internal 30A transfer switch and is very fast to change over. HOWEVER, it has two serious issues: 1) The fan is on a LOT even when just charging lightly and 2) it has to be "on" to charge the battery bank. So this, plus a separate converter-charger, means (1) you move the plug from shore power to inverter when you need to. Or does it? Well, maybe not, if you are willing to run the same way. The reason is this: This unit is SILENT except when under pretty heavy load. So if you have a converter/charger that can deliver the amps you could turn this on whenever you have shore or generator power, the converter is on, and your plugged-in things are on this all the time. This is basically 15 amps of output (as is the 2kw all-in-one) but the transfer is manual -- other than none at all if you leave it on all the time when on shore or generator power. Is this viable? IMHO, yes, because the quiescent draw on this thing is only about 1 amp or roughly 12 watts. You can't leave it on ALL the time when there is no charge as obviously 1 amp will kill your pack BUT if you have a charge source 1 amp is not much -- and you silent operation except under heavy load. If your converter/charger fan is thermostatically controlled.... there you go. The biggest issue I have with all the integrated ones, whether Renogy, Victron or anyone else is noise level. This doesn't matter if the unit is not in inhabited space and far enough away that it doesn't matter, but if it IS in inhabited space then it really does matter quite a bit. No idea on reliability but it absolutely does put out the 120V, its sine-wave, and at least under light loads the fans never come on. Someone should figure out how to have ambient cooling except under heavy load and essentially be silent in something like the Victron MultiPlus (or equivalent Renogy) units, but until they do if noise is a factor separates win for that reason, along with charge being independent of the inverter being turned on.
D**L
Let's be clear; there are multiple cheaper, poorly made and unreliable alternatives to this Renogy. This was installed on a sailboat, and provides our only 110V current when we're offshore. I needed something reliable and trustworthy. Expensive? Definitely. Well-made, with good components, excellent fit and finish, and the ability to power my toaster and coffee maker, and the TV at night, and whatever else needs to run off 110V when we're away from the marina. Easy installation, although beware; the included battery cables are (of excellent quality) short at about 3 feet. I had to buy and make longer ones.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
2 weeks ago