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If you're hauling a Onewheel GT S-Series to remote singletrack and need a portable power station that can fully top up the board between sessions, the Bluetti AC70 Onewheel GT S-Series trail rider truck bed resupply rig is the sweet-spot answer for 2026. The AC70's 768Wh LiFePO4 battery and 1000W pure sine wave inverter line up almost perfectly with the GT S-Series' roughly 750Wh pack and 750W Hypercharger brick, giving you about one complete board recharge per AC70 cycle without straining the inverter or the cells. Drop one in a milk crate behind the cab, run it off a 12V inverter or solar between drives, and you have a working trail-day refuel station.
Why the AC70 fits the Onewheel GT S-Series resupply use case
Onewheel's GT S-Series ships with a 750W Hypercharger that pulls about 6.3A at 120V wall power. That's well inside the AC70's 1000W continuous output ceiling, with comfortable headroom for the brick's inrush spike during the constant-current phase. A lot of 500-600Wh power stations technically run the Hypercharger but choke during the first 30 seconds as the board negotiates, then trip the overcurrent protection. The AC70 doesn't blink. It also has a 1400W power-lifting mode for non-resistive loads, though you won't need it for board charging.
Capacity-wise, the AC70's 768Wh nameplate translates to roughly 660-700Wh usable at the AC outlet after inverter losses (the LiFePO4 chemistry and Bluetti's DC-AC conversion sit around 86-90% efficient at this draw). A fully drained GT S-Series wants around 750Wh from the wall to hit 100%. In practical terms you'll see one AC70 charge take the board from roughly 15% to a full 100%, or from 0% to about 90%. For most trail riders cycling sessions through a Saturday, that's a complete resupply between rides.
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Truck bed setup specifics
The AC70 weighs 22.5 lb and measures about 12.4 x 8.2 x 10 inches, which is small enough to wedge between a wheel well and a toolbox in a midsize truck bed. For full-day trail rides, riders typically run one of three setups:
- Drive-and-refill: Plug the AC70 into a 1000W+ pure sine wave inverter wired to the truck's auxiliary battery while driving between trailheads. The AC70's turbo input pulls up to 950W from the wall, refilling itself in roughly 75 minutes. Don't run this off the starter battery unless you want to walk home.
- Solar parked: A 200W folding solar panel on the tailgate feeds the AC70's MPPT input directly. In summer sun you'll harvest 120-160Wh per hour, enough to recover one full board top-up over a 6-hour parked session.
- Pre-charged plus backup: Top the AC70 at home the night before, then carry a smaller secondary unit (a RIVER 3 Plus is popular here) for emergency partial charges on rides 3+ of the day.
EcoFlow alternatives that work for GT S-Series resupply
If you can't find an AC70 in stock or want to compare options, EcoFlow's RIVER line covers similar capacity bands at competitive 2026 pricing. The RIVER 2 Pro is the closest direct analog to the AC70 — same LiFePO4 chemistry, similar capacity, comparable inverter ceiling, and slightly faster wall-charging. The RIVER 2 Max is a half-charge option for shorter sessions, and the RIVER 3 line is best as a backup or "top-off between heats" companion rather than a primary resupply.
| Model | Capacity | AC Output | Full Wall Recharge | GT S charges per cycle |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bluetti AC70 (reference) | 768Wh | 1000W (1400W lift) | ~75 min | ~1 full |
| EcoFlow RIVER 2 Pro | 716Wh | 800W (1600W X-Boost) | ~70 min | ~0.9 full |
| EcoFlow RIVER 2 Max | 499Wh | 500W (1000W X-Boost) | ~60 min | ~0.6 partial |
| EcoFlow RIVER 3 Plus | 286Wh | up to 1200W (X-Boost) | ~60 min | ~0.35 partial |
| EcoFlow RIVER 3 | 245Wh | 300W (600W X-Boost) | ~60 min | ~0.3 partial |
One important note on EcoFlow's X-Boost feature: it works by reducing voltage to fit higher-wattage loads, which is fine for resistive appliances but can confuse switching power supplies like the Onewheel Hypercharger. For the 500W RIVER 2 Max in particular, the Hypercharger may renegotiate down or kick out under X-Boost. Stick to the rated 500W output on that unit and treat it as a partial-charge tool, not a full-resupply rig.
EcoFlow RIVER 2 Pro — the closest AC70 alternative
The RIVER 2 Pro packs 716Wh of LiFePO4 cells and an 800W native AC output, putting it within striking distance of the AC70's headline numbers. For Onewheel GT S-Series resupply, the 800W ceiling has 50W of cushion over the 750W Hypercharger draw, which is tighter than the AC70's 250W cushion but functionally fine. EcoFlow's app gives you per-second draw graphs, which is useful for diagnosing if a board is pulling more than spec (a sign of an aging pack). One charge cycle gets you to roughly 90-95% on a GT S from empty. The 70-minute wall recharge is faster than most competitors in this band. Check the RIVER 2 Pro on Amazon.
EcoFlow RIVER 2 Max — half-day session option
If your trail days are typically two GT S rides separated by a long drive, the RIVER 2 Max's 499Wh capacity covers one full resupply only if you've ridden the board down to about 40%. For full empty-to-full charging, plan on combining the Max with a vehicle-inverter top-up during your drive between trailheads. The 500W native AC output is enough for the Hypercharger without invoking X-Boost. The Max's selling point is the 1-hour wall recharge — useful if you've got a quick stop at a gas station with a working outlet. Check the RIVER 2 Max on Amazon.
EcoFlow RIVER 3 Plus — emergency top-off companion
At 286Wh, the RIVER 3 Plus can't fully resupply a GT S-Series, but it earns its place in the truck bed kit as a "I forgot to plug the AC70 in last night" emergency unit and as a phone, headlamp, and GoPro hub. The 1200W X-Boost AC output is overkill for a board charger but handy for warming food or running a tire inflator. Many Bluetti AC70 Onewheel GT S-Series trail rider setups carry one of these as a redundancy unit weighing under 9 pounds. Check the RIVER 3 Plus on Amazon.
EcoFlow RIVER 3 — smallest backup option
The base RIVER 3 at 245Wh and 300W native AC output is on the edge for Onewheel charging. The 300W ceiling is below the GT S Hypercharger's 750W draw, so X-Boost will engage and may cause the Hypercharger to renegotiate. It's not a recommended primary or even secondary charger for the GT S. Where it shines is in carrying low-draw camp gear: a string of LED lights, charging laptops in the cab, or running a 12V cooler overnight. Pair it with the AC70 only if you have specific low-power loads to offload. Check the RIVER 3 on Amazon.
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Charging the AC70 from your truck while you drive
The AC70 accepts up to 12V/10A DC input through its car-charging port, which translates to about 120W of replenishment per driving hour. That's slow. If your trailheads are an hour apart and your board needs 750Wh to refill, the 12V port alone won't keep up. Two better options:
First, run a 1000W pure sine wave inverter directly off the truck's auxiliary battery (or starter battery with engine running) and plug the AC70's regular AC charging brick into it. The AC70 will pull its full 950W turbo input and gain about 12-13Wh per minute. A 75-minute drive gets you back to full.
Second, install a dedicated 30A DC-DC charger between your starter and aux batteries, then run the AC70 off the aux through an inverter. This is the preferred setup if you're doing this every weekend — it keeps your starter battery isolated and means you can keep the AC70 charging even at stops with the engine off. See our companion guide on portable power station truck bed wiring for the specifics on fuse sizing and inverter selection.
Heat, vibration, and other truck bed realities
The AC70's LiFePO4 cells are rated for charging between 32°F and 104°F. In summer, a closed truck bed cover can push interior temps past 130°F. If you're parking at a trailhead in July, either lift the tonneau when parked or move the AC70 into the shade outside the bed. The BMS will protect itself by throttling charge current above ~104°F, but you don't want to repeatedly cycle the unit at the edge of its operating range — it shortens calendar life.
Vibration isn't a major concern for LiFePO4 chemistry, but the AC70's plastic shell and display screen are not ruggedized. Anchor it to a tie-down point with a strap rather than letting it slide around. A 3/8-inch foam yoga mat under the unit dampens road vibration and protects the bed liner. For wet-weather trail rides, the AC70 is not waterproof or even particularly weather-resistant. A simple kayaker's drybag rated to 20L fits the unit with room for cables and converts your kit into a rain-tolerant package without adding meaningful weight.
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What you actually save by going this route
Compared to running an extension cord from a gas generator (loud, smelly, regulated at most trailheads), the AC70 setup is silent, legal in fire-restricted zones, and small enough to leave in the bed permanently. Compared to a second Onewheel Hypercharger left at home, you can actually do mid-ride resupplies away from outlets. And compared to buying a 1500Wh+ power station, you're spending half as much for a unit that exactly matches the GT S-Series' single-charge demand profile. For riders splitting time between trail sessions and basecamp van life, check our breakdown of solar generators for electric skateboards and Onewheels for the full landscape of options at different capacity tiers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can the Bluetti AC70 fully charge a Onewheel GT S-Series from empty?
One AC70 cycle (768Wh nameplate, ~680Wh usable at the AC outlet) gets a fully drained GT S-Series to roughly 90% state of charge. If your board is at 10-15% when you plug in, expect to reach 100%. Riders who want a true 0-to-100 every time should either pre-charge the AC70 to 100% and accept that ~90% return, or pair it with a second power station.
Will the AC70's 1000W inverter handle the Onewheel Hypercharger's startup spike?
Yes. The Hypercharger draws roughly 750W steady state with a brief startup negotiation of about 800W. The AC70's 1000W continuous and 1400W power-lift modes both clear this with headroom. The unit's pure sine wave output is also clean enough to avoid the harmonics that have been reported to confuse some Onewheel chargers on cheap modified sine wave inverters.
How long does it take to recharge the AC70 in a truck bed between trail laps?
From a 1000W AC source (wall or vehicle inverter), the AC70's turbo input mode refills 0-100% in approximately 75 minutes. From a 200W solar panel in good sun, expect 5-6 hours for a full refill. From a 12V truck cigarette lighter, plan on 6-7 hours — too slow for between-lap resupply.
Is the AC70 better than the EcoFlow RIVER 2 Pro for Onewheel charging?
Slightly. The AC70 has 7% more capacity (768Wh vs 716Wh) and a higher native AC ceiling (1000W vs 800W), so it has more headroom against the Hypercharger's 750W draw. The RIVER 2 Pro recharges 5 minutes faster and has a better companion app. For a GT S-Series specifically, the AC70 is the safer all-rounder; for mixed-load camping where you want app monitoring, the RIVER 2 Pro is competitive.
Can I charge two Onewheel GT S-Series boards from one AC70?
No. A single AC70 cycle delivers about 680Wh of usable energy. Charging two GT S boards from empty requires roughly 1500Wh from the wall. You'd need a 1500Wh+ power station like the Bluetti AC180 or AC200L, or you'd need to refill the AC70 between boards (75 minutes plugged in for each refill).
What solar panel pairs best with the AC70 for trail day use?
The AC70's MPPT input accepts 12-28V at up to 500W. A 200W folding panel (such as Bluetti's PV200 or any 200W panel with MC4 connectors) is the practical sweet spot for truck bed deployment — it folds to roughly 21x21 inches, weighs about 16 pounds, and harvests enough on a sunny day to fully refill the AC70 in one parked session.
Is LiFePO4 actually worth it for this application?
Yes. LiFePO4 cells handle 3000+ full cycles before hitting 80% capacity, versus 500-800 cycles for the NMC cells in older power stations. For a Bluetti AC70 Onewheel GT S-Series trail rider use case where you're cycling the unit twice per weekend (~100 cycles per year), LiFePO4 means 30+ years of useful service rather than 5-8 years. The chemistry also has a much wider safe operating temperature range, which matters in a truck bed.
Key Takeaways
- Choosing the right Bluetti AC70 Onewheel GT S-Series trail rider means matching capacity and output ports to your actual devices
- Always check actual watt-hours (Wh), not just watts — runtime depends on Wh, not peak output
- Also covers: Bluetti AC70 Onewheel GT charger
- Also covers: portable power station Onewheel trailhead
- Also covers: AC70 Onewheel GT S-Series recharge runtime
- Compare price-per-Wh across models to find the best value for your budget