Drowning In Despair:  A Deep Dive Into The Jinko Solar Suntank Warranty

jinko suntank battery and warning symbol

UPDATE JULY 2023: Jinko has updated and improved the SunTank warranty, also retroactively applying it to existing installations. Good on them! The new warranty document is available here. Summary of changes below:

Features Old Warranty New Warranty
Energy Retention 70% for the first 5 years
50% for another 5 years
60% for 10 years
Life Cycle or Life Cycle Power Shouldn’t be over 300 per year Total energy discharged from the battery reaches 3.05MWh per kWh usable capacity
Accessories Warranty Period 1 year 2 years
Warranty if not connected with Internet 3 years 5 years
Operating Temperature -10 ~ +45 -10 ~ +50
Transferrable No Yes
Others Applies to all previously sold systems

 

Jinko Solar launched their Suntank low-voltage home battery in July 2022.  This article is my opinion of its warranty.  While it’s possible the battery could be good, I can tell you right now its warranty isn’t.  

Jinko has provided the Suntank battery with the type of warranty I’d expect from a no-name manufacturer that disappears once they realise Australian consumer law applies regardless of what’s in their warranty fine print.  It’s very disappointing, given Jinko solar panels have an excellent reputation for being reliable and well-supported in Australia.

Jinko claims the battery has a 10 year warranty, but if used for more than one full cycle per day – common for many already installed home batteries – the warranty can easily end in four years or less.  In some cases, after a single year.  

Read on if you want to find out just how bad I think the Suntank warranty is.  But first, I’ll briefly explain what the Suntank is.

The Suntank Modular Low Voltage Battery

Jinko’s solar battery is a modular, low-voltage energy storage solution.  The modular part means you can stack modules from one to ten high:

Stacked Suntank modules

The Suntank home battery can have from 1 to 10 modules for 2.3 to 23kWh of usable energy storage.  You can also have multiple stacks.

Each module has 2.3 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of usable storage when new, and it’s possible to have just one module, making a very small home battery.  If you want to check out its tech specs, here’s the datasheet.

A Suntank battery requires a Suntank hybrid inverter, and its datasheet is here.  Because the battery system is low voltage, the cables that connect it to the inverter need to carry high current, and are thick and heavy, so they must be closely co-located.

Now you know, in a nutshell, what the Suntank battery is — I’ll tell you what it isn’t.  It isn’t covered by a good warranty.  It has two major problems.  The first is terrible, while the second goes beyond terrible and dwells in a dark dimension all of its own.

Where the Suntank warranty lies between evil and good.

This is my opinion of where the Suntank warranty falls on the above graph.  (As you can see, I like to think outside of the box.)

If you want to check out the warranty document for yourself, you can find it here.

1st Huge Problem: 50% Capacity Retention

The warranty only promises the Suntank battery will retain a minimum of 70% of its nominal energy capacity of 2.56kWh per module in the first five years of its — potentially — 10 year warranty.  In the last 5 years, it only promises 50%.  This is worse than any reputable home battery on the Australian market.  While it may not seem much worse than the 60% minimum retention some battery warranties offer, these generally allow far more kWh to be discharged before they end.  The total amount of energy the Suntank battery can discharge without the warranty ending early — potentially very early — is very low.

2nd Even Worse Problem:  Warranty Can Self Destruct

If you want the warranty for the Suntank’s battery modules to last a full 10 years, then in each year of use, no more than the “Yearly Usable Rate” of 768kWh can be discharged from each module.  This is an average of  2.1kWh per module per day which is 91% of its usable storage capacity when new and only 82% of its nominal storage capacity.

If 783kWh are discharged per module per year — just 2% more than the 768kWh limit — then the warranty will only last 8 years.  That’s bad, but it rapidly gets worse than that.  If you use 10% more than the limit the warranty lasts 3 years.  Worst of all, if you commit the perfectly reasonable — but apparently unforgivable — act of discharging 22% more than that limit per year the warranty will self-destruct after one year.

Other Batteries Do Much Better

In comparison, if the following batteries were used to provide the equivalent amount of stored energy that was just enough to destroy the Suntank’s warranty after one year, their warranties would last…

  • Tesla Powerwall 2:  6.7 years1
  • BYD Battery Box Premium HVM:  7.4 years
  • Sungrow SBR HV:  10 years

The Warranty Bomb Equation

In the Suntank warranty, there’s a hideous equation that can cause it to self-destruct after a single year.  The warranty, that is, not the battery.  I’ll put a screenshot below so you can see how bad it is.  WARNING: Do not attempt to work through it without arithmetic protection.  It will kill you:

A complex warranty equation

I’m not making this up. It’s actually this complicated.

If you are a maths teacher, you can see that’s an annoying equation.  If you’re not a maths teacher, avert your eyes now!  Direct eye contact will damage the calculation centres of your brain.

Because the warranty does not give clear instructions on how to use the equation, I’ve used the most optimistic interpretation possible.  So it could be worse than I think it is.

4 Scenarios From Lousy To Disastrous

To show how terrible the warranty is, I’ll work out how long it will last under three different conditions.  I would call them the good, the bad, and the ugly — but because the warranty only promises the battery will retain 50%+ of its capacity — they’re actually the bad, the ugly, and the freaking disastrous. 

  • The Bad:  Per module, a daily average of 2.1kWh or less is discharged.
  • The Ugly:  Per module, a daily average of 2.3-2.41kWh is discharged.
  • The Freaking Disastrous:  Per module, a daily average of 2.41kWh or more is discharged.
Bad, ugly, and disastrous home batteries.

This is what I got when I asked for these home batteries in anime style from the DALL-E Image Creator.

The Bad

The first scenario is the best possible outcome as far as the warranty is concerned.  As long the amount of energy discharged per module is kept at the Yearly Usable Rate of 768kWh or below, the warranty will last 10 years.  If you go 1% above the warranty will still last 10 years, so you don’t have to worry about leap days dropping the warranty below 10 years, but going 2% or more over will end the warranty early. 

The Ugly

If a household discharges a daily average of 2.3kWh per module — an amount equal to its usable energy storage when new — then after one year it will have discharged 839.5kWh.  If this amount is discharged every year the warranty will self-destruct.

Here are the steps you have to follow after one year to work out how much trouble you’re in:

  1. Take the number of kWh discharged by the battery over a year and subtract 768 from them.  In this case, it will be 839.5 minus 768 which gives 71.5. 
  2. Divide 71.5 by 768.  This gives 0.0931.
  3. Times by 100%.  This will be 0.0931 times by 100% which gives 9.31%.
  4. Because 9.31% is greater than 0% but less than 10% you must multiply it by 0.5 to get 4.65%.
  5. The Yearly Usable Rate of 768kWh must then be reduced by 4.65% to give 732.25kWh. 

It’s not exactly easy, is it?  It’s also bizarre because you don’t have to do sums every year to work out how your TV or e-bike warranty is holding up.  Note you don’t do this just once for the battery as a whole.  It has to be done for every module in the system.

So how does this lead to warranty destruction?  Well, the next year you need to do the same calculation again, but instead of subtracting 768 from the number of kWh discharged, you now have to subtract the Reduced Yearly Usable Rate of 732.25kWh.  

If exactly the same amount of energy is discharged in the second year, then step 3 in the calculations will give 13.93%.  Because this is more than 10% and less than 20% it’s multiplied by 0.8 to get 11.15%.  When that’s subtracted from the Reduced Yearly Usable Rate it becomes 650.63kWh. 

In the third year, step 3 will give us 24.59%.  Because this is more than 20% but less than 30%, we must multiply it by 1.3.  This gives 31.97%.  Because this figure is greater than 30% it means the warranty ends after just three years.  This is because of the warranty condition that says:

“In any event, if the calculated Total Reduced Rate is more than 30%, then the performance warranty is void due to the overuse or misuse.”

Now that’s bloody cheeky!  For most other batteries, it would be normal use — not over or misuse!

Freaking Disastrous

If a daily average of 2.42 to 2.55kWh are discharged from a module, then the warranty will only last two years.  Worse still, if the average daily discharge is equal to its nominal storage capacity of 2.56kWh or more, then the warranty will be void after a single year.  Now that’s freaking disastrous.

An evil looking document.

For some reason, whenever I try to print a hard copy of the warranty, it comes out looking like this.  (Image Credit: Still from the movie Evil Dead 2.)

Capacity Loss May Extend The Warranty

In the above examples, I assumed the same amount of energy would be discharged from the battery each year.  But if the battery’s capacity falls, then the energy discharged each year may also fall.  Because the warranty allows for a lot of capacity deterioration, this could potentially add a year or more to how long the warranty lasts.  

Of course, if the only reason a battery warranty lasts as long as it does is that its capacity is rapidly deteriorating, that is a disaster in itself.

Modules May Not Discharge Evenly

Ideally, all the modules in a Suntank system would discharge almost identical amounts of energy.  But this may not be the case and some modules in a stack may consistently discharge more or less than the others.  It’s also possible the difference in output between modules will increase over time.  So a battery system may appear safe from warranty self-destruction, but individual modules may have reduced or completely ruined warranties.

Small Battery = High Warranty Risk

Its terrible warranty makes one of the apparent benefits of the Suntank battery — the ability to have a small battery system — a liability.  This is because the smaller the battery, the harder it generally works.  This is because small batteries…

  • Are more likely to be fully drained overnight.
  • Are more likely to be fully charged during the day.
  • Small discharges and recharges during the day use a larger portion of their capacity.  A daytime discharge that’s 5% the capacity of a new 13.5kWh Powerwall 2 will be 29% the usable capacity of a new single-module Suntank battery and close to 15% that of a two-module system.

Many larger home batteries are used at an average daily capacity factor of around 80% or less.  But it’s not difficult for small batteries to be used at 100% capacity or higher. Because using the Suntank battery at a daily average of over 91% of its usable capacity when new will destroy its warranty in one to four years, small systems are at high risk of warranty self-destruction.

VPPs Are A Risk

Joining a Virtual Power Plant (VPP) will increase the amount of energy a Suntank discharges and put it at risk of warranty self-destruction.  While VPPs vary in how hard they work batteries, they all have the potential to be problematic.

Can Battery Settings Preserve Warranty?  Beats Me!

After forcing myself to read through the abysmal warranty, the first coherent thought that emerged from my badly abused mind was…

“Is it possible to set the battery so each module never uses more than 768kWh per year?  Alternatively, can the depth of discharge be reduced to make exceeding that amount unlikely or impossible?”

To find out, I tried to look up the installation manual online, but I couldn’t find it.  I did find a page for downloading it, but Jinko hasn’t finished it yet…

Unfinished Jinko Suntank download page

If you are wondering what the text is, it’s a Latin Bible verse. While my Latin is a little rusty, I think it’s the one about orangutans and breakfast cereal

Fortunately, Jinko has a copy of the installation manual online here.  Looking through it, I see no mention of how to stop its warranty from self-destructing.  I have contacted Jinko to ask if anything can be done.  If they give any advice, I’ll let you know. 

No Monitoring = 3 Years Warranty.

One of the warranty requirements is that it must be connected to the internet so Jinko can monitor it.  If it isn’t connected, then the warranty only lasts three years.  But it’s still possible for the warranty to self-destruct before that, in a way similar to a monitored battery.  This means you can’t benefit by not connecting it to the internet and getting three years of warranty instead of potentially one.

1 Year Smartmeter & Wireless Warranty

The battery requires a Jinko smart meter and a wireless monitoring module to be connected to the internet.  Both these items only have a 12 month warranty.  So the battery system, which supposedly has a 10 year warranty, is dependent upon components with one year warranties.  This is a major problem and I’d normally complain about it at length, but it’s overshadowed by the warranty’s super major problems. 

Warranty Exclusions

As with every battery warranty, a whole list of exclusions render it void.  These mostly boil down to…

  • The battery must be installed and used according to the manual.
  • It can’t be hacked or modified in any way without permission.
  • The warranty doesn’t cover anything that isn’t Jinko’s fault.

There are a few exclusions I’ll mention specifically.  One is…

  • “Outdoor installation or outdoor usage without proper shelter.”

While the datasheet gives its Ingress Protection (IP) rating as IP65, which means it should be able to withstand rain without harm, they still don’t want the Suntank exposed to the elements.  The installation manual states it must be protected from rain and direct sunlight.

  • “Fail to meet the operating environmental requirement: charging temperature -10°C to +45° C, discharging temperature -10°C to +45°C…”

This should be on the battery manufacturer.  If they don’t want charging or discharging outside of a temperature range it should shut down by itself.  That’s how home batteries normally operate, but this exclusion makes it sound as though it’s the owner’s responsibility.

  • “This warranty does not cover superficial or cosmetic defects, dents, marks or scratches, which do not affect the proper function of the battery, especially for warranty replacement devices.”

So if the battery system is ugly the warranty won’t cover it, and if they replace it, the replacement can also be ugly.

It’s Non-Transferrable

The warranty says it can’t be transferred, so if you sell your home, you can’t pass it on to its new owner.  This is annoying but may be less of a problem than most home batteries, given that the warranty may have already self-destructed by the time you want to move.

Anime woman trying to transfer a warranty.

I asked DALL-E to produce another picture in anime style. Also, DALL-E can’t spell. In any language.

What Jinko Will Do

In the first 5 years of the warranty, if the battery becomes defective due to…

“…material defect in design, materials and workmanship that impair the performance of the Goods.”

…then Jinko will either repair it or provide a replacement.  The specific wording they use is…

“Exchange for a replacement device of equivalent value according to the model and age.”

So if they replace it, you may not get a new Suntank battery.  They can give something else of “equivalent value” and don’t explain how that value will be determined.  The warranty also states that if the new system isn’t compatible, costs that are incurred as a result are not covered.

In the final 5 years of the 10 year warranty — assuming it lasts that long — the warranty says that instead of a repair or replacement, Jinko Solar can give you a “pro rata / proper price”.  So if three years are left in the warranty, you may be given 30% of the system’s price.  The warranty also says it’s completely up to Jinko whether they give you a repair, replacement, or pro-rata refund.

Another thing Jinko claims they can do in the final five years of the warranty, again, entirely at their discretion, is…

“…renew it by a recent technology brand new product with a reasonable price payable by the customer.”

Now if this was offered as an option, that would be one thing.  But the way I’m reading this is Jinko can decide to fulfil their warranty obligations by giving you a discount on a new system you have to pay for.  That is in no way acceptable, in my opinion.  Maybe when that one breaks down, the only option they’ll offer is to make you buy another new one?

Doesn’t Cover Losses Or Labour

The warranty says it doesn’t cover losses resulting from anything.  It also says it won’t cover labour or logistics costs.  I presume logistics includes transport costs.

The Last Sentence Is A Doozy…

The final sentence of warranty is…

“Jinko reserves the right to modify or update this Limited Warranty at any time, with or without notice.”

At any time?  Do they mean they can change it after the battery has been bought?  If they do mean that, they can void the warranty whenever they feel like it.  This would be nuts.  Here’s a sentence they should add to make things clear:

“The warranty conditions will always remain those that apply at the time of purchase.”

Australian Consumer Law

Fortunately, you are protected by Australian Consumer Guarantees that apply no matter what’s in the warranty.  You can read about the strong consumer protection they provide here

While I am not a lawyer, it looks as though Jinko is at considerable risk of having to support batteries for the full 10 years, even if the self-destruct equation says the warranty ended after just one year.  This is because Jinko has made no effort to clarify that normal home battery use in Australia can rapidly destroy its warranty.  Its datasheet states it has a 10 year warranty, but the only way to find out that’s not really true is through the following three-step process:

  1. Have a good understanding of how home batteries are used.
  2. Read the warranty and find and understand its self-destruct equation.
  3. Do annoying 7th grade maths to find out how bad the warranty actually is.

That’s too much to ask of a typical Australian looking for a reliable home battery.  If they said the battery had a 1-10 year warranty depending on usage, they’d have a leg to stand on.  But at the moment, it’s like they’ve downed an entire flagon of cheap port.  They’re utterly legless. 

My Advice

In case you haven’t guessed by now, I don’t advise buying this battery.  Not with its current warranty.  Jinko may improve it, but I doubt they’ll change it enough to make it worthwhile.  If the battery could support a significantly better warranty, it would probably already have one.  Perhaps the Suntank could suit someone who’s certain they’ll stay below the warranty self-destruct limit, but I don’t see why they wouldn’t just get a battery with a better warranty. 

I am morose over the fact Jinko Solar’s first battery has a warranty that makes it completely unrecommendable.  All I can hope for is the high-voltage battery they intend to release in the future will be miles ahead of this disappointing product.

Footnotes

  1. This assumes the Powerwall 2 is used under the warranty condition that allows for 37,000kWh of energy throughput.
About Ronald Brakels

Joining SolarQuotes in 2015, Ronald has a knack for reading those tediously long documents put out by solar manufacturers and translating their contents into something consumers might find interesting. Master of heavily researched deep-dive blog posts, his relentless consumer advocacy has ruffled more than a few manufacturer's feathers over the years. Read Ronald's full bio.

Comments

  1. The discharge rate/ cycle qty life for LiFePO4 is well known. Seems to me this is just codifying it. Allbeit in a complex equation.
    It’s a small battery….lower life than a big battery. And yes, multiple daily 80% discharge cycles will kill it sooner.
    The other batteries you quote are larger capacity and will naturally have longer lifes partially because the rate at which you will practically discharge a larger battery will be further away from it’s max discharge rating. The chemistry gets a better amount of time to equalise things.
    This is like trying to run your house off a single AA battery. It’s not practical.

  2. Alan Gregory says

    So Jinko’s marketing is aimed at those who don’t read warranties, i.e. normal people!

  3. Dear Ronald,

    Thanks for taking the time provide us the feedback and meet with us recently. During our meeting, JinkoSolar Energy Storage committed to make certain improvements, which is in process.

    The Jinko team appreciate your comments and we acknowledge that although the current document ticks boxes, as a leading company in the industry we do recognise there is always room for improvement.

    The good news is our customers are experiencing reliable performance from the widely installed fleet, and the backend data suggests it is rare for the typical customer to have more than 1 cycle per day. Having said that, Jinko always learn from our customers and experts like yourselves and continues to improve our product inc. warranty policies based on market feedback and reviews.

    Please be assured we are working on a new revision to support our quality products, which will shortly be completed. Jinko expect to share the update with you in about a month time and we would like you to review the update once again and share your true thoughts.

    In the meantime, please be assured that in full compliance with Australian Consumer Law, there is no capacity for warranty documents to retrospectively remove expected benefits from warranties in place at the time of sale, nor is it our intention to do it. The warranty term raised in the blog post about issuing new warranties in the future is designed to indicate that post the issue date of certain warranty versions, there may be new versions of the warranty which would then affect only the future sales and not be retrospective, noting that in fact the general trend of warranties in the industry is for them to improve over time. Similarly, for new owners of the system installed at the same address, such as when homes are sold, the warranty would be accessible to the new owner and only in the case the system is moved would there be impact on the warranty. Jinko will update the term to more align the wording to intention.

  4. Philip Ripper says

    Thanks for the article Ronald.
    Sounds like with that technology we need to get a battery that is 20% bigger than the maximum likely (or managed) draw per day and to keep it out of the weather, but well ventilated.
    What systems are available to manage the maximum daily drawdown of any household battery?

    • Reading that it seems like all they’re doing is describing the characteristics of LFP cells. As we know, if you go overcurrent or over/under charge the cells, damage is immediate and permanent! Giving you a full year in that context is pure charity. And in some chemistries (*ahem* older Samsung phones!) it’ll probably set the house on fire while you sleep.

      That said, all these parameters should’ve been tightly controlled by the BMS to ensure you never exceed, or go near the actual cell limits. Take a page from Tesla’s books, PW2 is actually 15kWh under the hood (possibly more?), But they advertise as 13.5. they set that customer expectation upfront and the BMS simply prevents you from accessing the last 10% even if you tried. That’s their safety margin, that’s a formula proven with half a million of their cars on the road. Everyone’s happy.

      So where Jinko probably went wrong here is not affording themselves that margin in their marketing message, nor using adequately high quality BMS to monitor for, and prohibit damage. That’s on them.

      But consider this too, how much did Jinko’s setup cost you per kWh? If you’re paying substantially less than Tesla’s PW2 prices but also pumping your cells to 100% on both ends, multiple times a day, that’s just asking for premature failure. All I’m saying is, if the Jinko customer had forked out for 10% more capacity than they actually needed, warranty would have been a non-issue, and it probably would’ve cost less than a PW2 too. So now the installer/reseller also gets dragged into the conversation for failing to educate the customer properly to size their system correctly.

      Basically, you get what you pay for. You scrape the bottom of your petty cash tin to pay for an undersized battery system, you’ll get a bottom-end user experience with it. Nothing new that we shouldn’t already know since childhood.

    • Erik Christiansen says

      The most common way “to manage the maximum daily drawdown of any household battery” is to set a discharge limit in the battery inverter. If on-grid, then you’re buying energy again after that, and if off-grid, you’d better have an autostart generator, or the lights go out. (If you have a freezer, eat the ice-cream first. 😉 Physically, the battery State of Charge measurement may take place in a separate Current Shunt, which may communicate with a separate system controller. and that may be the device triggering the generator autostart. It can all be made nearly as complicated as you’d like, given persistence.

      In any event, avoiding battery murder by repeated over-discharging is the prime responsibility of any battery custodian. Don’t be surprised if flogging it to death kills it. The trick is understanding the battery’s cycle life at different DoD. All that vendors need to do is publish a five to ten line table with two columns: DoD, and Warranted Cycles. Those who do that are the ones worth buying from.

  5. Thanks Eric,
    I will keep that in mind when I purchase a battery or an EV.

    • Erik Christiansen says

      Philip, on EVs the trick is to either wait a little bit until the Li-Ion powered vehicles go away (That’s the chemistry with tangible fire risk) or grab a BYD or other LiFePO4 equipped EV, even some Teslas. which are touted to last twice as long ( a million km) at the cost of slightly shorter range. (They’re a bit heavier, but don’t catch fire.) The BYD Seagull, only available in China so far, has shiny new Na-Ion batteries, said to have all the benefits of LiFePO4, at a lower price. Sadly, there’s still no decent EV ute available here.

      It looks like a high proportion of EVs will rust out before the batteries are too tired for commuting. (They’re already being used by the thousand, 2nd hand, in grid scale batteries in USA.) I wouldn’t mind laying my hands on one for the EV mower I want to build for nearly a hectare of “lawn” required for fire protection around the house. In autumn and winter the kangaroos do a great job, including adding fertiliser, but late spring and summer still calls for the tired old ICE ride-on. Commercial EV mowers seem tinny, underpowered, and overpriced. Anyway, where’s the fun in just buying one?

  6. Dear SolarQuotes team,

    As discussed earlier, it is always great to have you review our product, and I did mention that Jinko took this seriously and committed to improve the warranty T&Cs. As promised, we’ve officially updated with new version, it is now available to be downloaded from our website.

    Please check below:
    https://jinkosolarenergystorage.com.au/after-sales-technical-service/

    This new version of warranty will BACKDATE and COVER ALL systems been installed since start.

    Besides, our hotline number (1300 326 182) has also been upgraded to give customers better experience. Feel free to give us call for any question you have.

    Thank you for your support all the time.

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