Power Your Starlink Mini Anywhere. 3 Solar Tests, 1 Clear Winner

Radek LEO

Solar Charging for the Starlink Mini: 3 Setups, Tested in the Field

Proof, not promises · a 4ROAM field guide

This is the companion guide to our video. In plain words and clear pictures it shows how to charge a power bank with a solar panel while that same power bank runs your Starlink Mini, and which setup is right for you. Everything here comes from real field tests in full sun.

The problem

Why the cheap panel lets you down

Many people buy a “30 watt” USB solar panel, plug it into the power bank, and feel let down. The Starlink Mini pulls about 20 watts non-stop. If the panel cannot deliver at least that much, the power bank slowly drains and you go dark. We ran three real setups in full sun. Here is what happened.

The tests

Setup 1 · Cheap USB panel (the one that fails)

Setup 1: a cheap 30 W USB panel straight into the power bank. It only slows the drain.

On paper the panel is 30 watts, but through its USB output it really gives around 10 watts. The Starlink takes about 20, so the power bank keeps losing roughly 10 watts. It lasts longer than with no panel, but it still empties and dies. Not enough on its own. Runtime: about 10 hours in full sun, about 7 hours in mixed weather.

The tests

Setup 2 · MPPT + buffer (the best)

Setup 2: panel, MPPT controller, LiFePO4 buffer and SlimQ feed the power bank.

The PowerFilm 30 W panel feeds a Genasun GV-5 MPPT controller, a small LiFePO4 buffer, and a SlimQ converter, which charges the power bank. About 24 watts reach the bank against the Starlink’s 20, so you have a small surplus: the reserve grows. In the sun it runs without end, and after dark the full buffer keeps the Starlink alive for about 8 to 9 more hours. The “almost 60 watts” you may see on the display is the buffer helping for a moment, not the panel alone. All day, all weather.

The tests

Setup 3 · Panel into the SlimQ (light, but limited)

Setup 3: the same panel into the SlimQ, without the MPPT and buffer.

This charges too, and it is the lightest working option. But without the MPPT only about 16 watts reach the bank, and without the buffer nothing smooths passing clouds. The balance is about -4 watts, so it drains slowly. Runtime is about 14 to 15 hours on a sunny day and about 9 hours in mixed weather, then it dies before dark.

The numbers

How long does it last?

Runtime from a full 99 Wh power bank at about 20 W. Only Setup 2 gets you through the night.
Runtime from a full 99 Wh power bank at about 20 W. Only Setup 2 gets you through the night.

These are theoretical estimates for good weather. Only Setup 2 has a positive balance in the sun, so it runs endlessly and still keeps a night reserve.

Good to know

How much does the Starlink Mini really use?

The draw changes with what you do. We plan with a safe 20 W average.

Booting takes up to about 60 watts for a moment. Plain browsing is about 15 to 20 watts, video calls around 25, and streaming or gaming the most, about 30 to 35 watts. For planning we use a safe 20 watt average.

The parts

The MPPT: a jumpy panel becomes a steady charge

The MPPT holds a steady 14.2 V and stops charging when the buffer is full.

Sunlight keeps changing, so the panel’s voltage jumps around. The Genasun GV-5 turns that into a steady 14.2 volts for the LiFePO4 buffer, and it stops charging once the buffer is full. It is also electrically quiet, so it does not disturb radio or comms gear.

The parts

The SlimQ: raw DC in, clean USB out

One raw DC input (5 to 24 V), four regulated USB outputs.

The SlimQ is a small DC to DC converter. It takes 5 to 24 volts on a barrel input, so it can run straight from the panel or from the buffer, and it gives two independent USB-C ports at up to 100 watts each, plus two USB-A. A cheap cigarette-socket adapter cannot reliably deliver this from a 12 V socket.

The parts

The buffer: a small LiFePO4 tank

A custom 4S2P pack on automotive-grade cells. It does two jobs.

The buffer is a custom 4S2P pack built on automotive-grade BAK 26650PFS2 LiFePO4 cells: 12.8 volts, 7 Ah, about 90 Wh, around 760 grams. Its BMS handles up to 15 A peak, which is what the SlimQ needs at full power. It does two jobs: it lets the MPPT start and keep running, and it powers you when the panel cannot, in shade or at night.

The pack up close: the cell name, automotive-grade cells, and the 15 A BMS.

The decision

Which build is for you?

Two builds. Pick by how much you want to carry.

Light set (PowerFilm 30 + SlimQ, about 700 g): the lightest kit, fits in a pocket, best in good sun. Beast (PowerFilm 60 + MPPT + buffer + SlimQ, about 2.1 kg): only a little heavier, but it runs in any weather, even in shade, and keeps going deep into the night thanks to the buffer.

Cables and connections

Light set

USB Power Delivery (PD) picks the voltage on its own; the Starlink Mini settles at about 20 V.

Connection Connector Cable and electrical spec
Panel 30 to SlimQ (DC in) bare / MC4 to barrel 5.5 x 2.5 mm DC cable, AWG 14 silicone, ~21.9 V
SlimQ to Power bank USB-C to USB-C 100 W cable (5 A, e-marked), PD up to 20 V
Power bank to Starlink Mini USB-C to USB-C USB-C PD: 20 V, 65 W minimum, 100 W recommended

Cables and connections

Beast

Connection Connector Cable and electrical spec
Panel 60 to MPPT (PV in) MC4 / bare to ring terminals DC, AWG 14, ~21.9 V (PV+ / PV-)
MPPT (BAT out) to Buffer / bus ring terminals DC, AWG 14, ~14.2 V (BAT+ / BAT-)
Buffer bus to SlimQ (DC in) to barrel 5.5 x 2.5 mm DC, AWG 14, 12.8-14.2 V
SlimQ to Power bank USB-C to USB-C 100 W cable (5 A, e-marked), PD up to 20 V
Power bank to Starlink Mini USB-C to USB-C USB-C PD: 20 V, 65 W minimum, 100 W recommended

Shopping list

Products in this build

Prices and availability change. If a link is dead, search the model name.

You can download all the data in the PDF file: 
PDF

PowerFilm 30 W Foldable Solar Panel
The light-set / Setup 2 panel, about 0.6 kg.
PowerFilm (official)
PowerFilm 60 W Foldable Solar Panel
The Beast panel, about 1.2 kg, twice the headroom.
PowerFilm (official)
Genasun GV-5-Li-14.2 V MPPT Controller
The LiFePO4 (4S) version, holds a steady 14.2 V.
Sunforge (official)
SlimQ 260 W DC to USB Power Extender
5-24 V barrel in, two USB-C 100 W + two USB-A.
SlimQ (official)
Buffer battery pack (custom build)
4S2P on BAK 26650PFS2 automotive-grade LiFePO4 cells, 15 A BMS. A custom pack, not off the shelf.
BAK 26650 LiFePO4 cell (example)
Budget USB solar panel (Setup 1 option)
A current 28-30 W foldable panel with USB-A and USB-C. This is the Setup 1 category, it helps but cannot fully keep up.
Anker SOLIX 30 W
Power bank
PeakDo (~99 Wh) is the bank in the tests. CukTech 15 Ultra is a lighter, smaller option.
PeakDo LinkPower 2 · CukTech 15 Ultra

Standard equipment fails outside the city space. That is why at 4ROAM I design and use only professional gear you can trust. See you on the next exploration.

Have a fantastic day,
Radek · 4ROAM founder
4roam.com

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