What coffee machine and inverter to power?

Skyliner33

#rallyeroamer
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So, I know a few of the forum inmates have a coffee machine (amongst air fryers, microwaves, induction hobs etc).

If you have a coffee machine, which one do you have and whats the inverter you use to power it?

Cheers.
 
I use a renogy 1000w inverter paired to a 100w lithium. It powers my nespresso citiz and the nespresso milk frother (just, as it complains a bit during initial heating but always pulls through)
 
So, I know a few of the forum inmates have a coffee machine (amongst air fryers, microwaves, induction hobs etc).

If you have a coffee machine, which one do you have and whats the inverter you use to power it?

Cheers.
The van has a 2000 watt pure sine wave inverter 'PowerStar 2000' which has done the job with our baby Tassimo machine. Tassimo rated at 1300 watts but in practice 1960 watts according to Mr Cerbo.
Nowadays we have the coffee machine outside in the awning powered by a Bluetti 180p magic box! Both work well. Being in the awning it doesn't disturb the good wifes slumber!
 
YOU had a 1500 watt inverter once?!!! Really?!!!
@Drive Wayne …..We all start off on this Vanlife journey buying stuff only to find out it didn’t really work ….inverters included ..I’ve kept the 1500 so I could use it in the van if needed…but I’ll just have to put up with a mediocre power set up ….:rofl:
 
We have similar, 1300W via our Renogy 2kW.

Think it was a free machine, one of the offers Nespresso do occasionally.
Our 1300w Tassimo hits 1930 watts peak on the cerbo scale. Works OK off our 2000 watt inverter, but I usually use it on the Bluetti AC180, 2/3% of the capacity per cup.
 
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This is a great thread — loads of real-world setups here 👍

From what I’ve seen (and played around with a bit myself), most of these pod/table top coffee machines sit around 1200–1400W, but the bit that catches people out is the startup surge. They can spike quite a bit higher than the rated power for a second or two, which is usually what trips smaller inverters.

That’s why a lot of people seem to end up in a similar place:
  • 1000W inverter → might work, but can struggle when the machine heats up
  • 1500W inverter → doable for some machines
  • 2000W+ pure sine wave → much safer and less stress on everything
Even something like a Coffetek Neo (if you’re thinking along those lines for a van/compact setup) still needs proper power behind it — these machines might be “small,” but they’re still basically little kettles inside.

Couple of things worth keeping in mind:
  • It’s not just the wattage, it’s the surge + battery capability
  • You’re pulling serious amps at 12V when heating (well over 100A)
  • A couple of coffees can take a noticeable chunk out of your battery
  • Pure sine wave inverter is pretty much a must
If I was setting it up from scratch, I’d probably go:
  • 2000W pure sine minimum (just gives you breathing room)
  • Lithium battery if budget allows — handles the load way better
  • Or even a portable power station (EcoFlow/Bluetti) to keep things simple
That said… I totally get why some people just stick with a kettle on gas 😅 these machines aren’t exactly gentle on a 12V setup.
 
This is a great thread — loads of real-world setups here 👍

From what I’ve seen (and played around with a bit myself), most of these pod/table top coffee machines sit around 1200–1400W, but the bit that catches people out is the startup surge. They can spike quite a bit higher than the rated power for a second or two, which is usually what trips smaller inverters.

That’s why a lot of people seem to end up in a similar place:
  • 1000W inverter → might work, but can struggle when the machine heats up
  • 1500W inverter → doable for some machines
  • 2000W+ pure sine wave → much safer and less stress on everything
Even something like a Coffetek Neo (if you’re thinking along those lines for a van/compact setup) still needs proper power behind it — these machines might be “small,” but they’re still basically little kettles inside.

Couple of things worth keeping in mind:
  • It’s not just the wattage, it’s the surge + battery capability
  • You’re pulling serious amps at 12V when heating (well over 100A)
  • A couple of coffees can take a noticeable chunk out of your battery
  • Pure sine wave inverter is pretty much a must
If I was setting it up from scratch, I’d probably go:
  • 2000W pure sine minimum (just gives you breathing room)
  • Lithium battery if budget allows — handles the load way better
  • Or even a portable power station (EcoFlow/Bluetti) to keep things simple
That said… I totally get why some people just stick with a kettle on gas 😅 these machines aren’t exactly gentle on a 12V setup.
My budget Tassimo is rated at 1250 watts, but actually peaks at 1930 according to Cerbo. The vans 2000 watt inverter in the van does grumble a little but completes the job!
Nowadays the coffee machine lives in the awning and my Bluetti AC180 powers it, the airfryer and toaster (independently obviously) without complaint. Separate suitcase panels keep the Bluetti charged.
 
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