Franklin WH aPower vs HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh

Our Verdict Winner: HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh

The HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh wins this battery comparison by a decisive margin. It delivers 19.2 kWh of usable storage with 19.2 kW continuous output and a 6,000-cycle rating. The 5.6 kWh capacity advantage provides 7 additional hours of essential-load backup.

Power / Capacity
13.6 kWh
vs
19.2 kWh
Efficiency
89%
vs
96%
Warranty
12 yrs
vs
10 yrs

Key Differences

  • HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh provides 19.2 kWh vs 13.6 kWh usable capacity.
  • HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh achieves 96% round-trip efficiency vs 89%.
  • Franklin WH aPower offers a longer 12-year warranty vs 10 years.

Specifications Breakdown

Usable Storage Capacity

The Franklin WH aPower provides 13.6 kWh of usable capacity (13.6 kWh total, 100% DoD), while the HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh offers 19.2 kWh usable (19.2 kWh total, 100% DoD). At an average essential-load consumption rate of 750 watts, the Franklin WH aPower provides approximately 18.1 hours of backup versus 25.6 hours for the HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh. The HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh's 5.6 kWh capacity advantage translates to roughly 7 additional hours of essential-load backup during a grid outage. The Franklin WH aPower is scalable up to 15 units (204 kWh total), while the HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh scales up to 8 units (154 kWh total).

Power Output

The Franklin WH aPower delivers 5 kW continuous and 10 kW peak power, while the HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh provides 19.2 kW continuous and 19.2 kW peak. The HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh's higher continuous output means it can simultaneously power more demanding appliances during an outage. A central air conditioner typically draws 3-5 kW, a refrigerator 0.1-0.2 kW, and an EV Level 2 charger 7-11 kW. Peak power rating matters for motor-driven loads with high startup current, such as air conditioners, well pumps, and sump pumps. The HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh's 19.2 kW peak is capable of starting most residential HVAC systems.

Battery Chemistry & Cycle Life

The Franklin WH aPower uses LFP chemistry with a rated cycle life of 6,000 cycles (approximately 16.4 years of daily cycling), while the HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh uses LFP with 6,000 cycles (approximately 16.4 years). Both use LFP chemistry, which is considered the gold standard for residential energy storage due to its inherent safety, long cycle life, and environmental friendliness. Identical cycle ratings mean both batteries have the same expected operational lifespan under daily cycling.

Round-Trip Efficiency

The Franklin WH aPower achieves 89% round-trip efficiency versus 96% for the HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh. This means for every 10 kWh of solar energy stored in the HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh, 9.6 kWh is recoverable, compared to 8.9 kWh for the other. Over 10 years of daily cycling with 15 kWh average daily throughput, the more efficient battery saves approximately $575 in energy that would otherwise be lost as heat (at $0.15/kWh average retail rate). Higher round-trip efficiency is especially valuable in time-of-use rate environments where you are storing cheap off-peak energy for expensive peak-hour consumption.

Warranty & Long-Term Protection

The Franklin WH aPower carries a 12-year warranty and 43 MWh throughput, while the HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh offers 10 years. The Franklin WH aPower provides 2 additional years of manufacturer protection against capacity degradation and defects. Battery warranties typically guarantee the unit will retain 60-70% of original capacity by end of warranty, so the length of coverage directly impacts your financial risk over the system's lifetime.

Specification Comparison

Specification Franklin WH aPower HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh
Capacity 13.6 kWh 19.2 kWh
Usable Capacity 13.6 kWh 19.2 kWh
Power Output 5 kW 19.2 kW
Chemistry LFP (Lithium Iron Phosphate) LFP (Lithium Iron Phosphate)
Efficiency 89% 96%
Cycle Life 6,000 6,000
Weight 130 kg 228 kg
Warranty 12 years 10 years
Scalable Yes Yes

5-Dimension Head-to-Head Analysis

1. Storage Capacity

Winner: HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh

The HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh provides 19.2 kWh versus 13.6 kWh — 5.6 kWh more usable storage. At typical essential-load consumption of 0.75 kW, this equals approximately 7 additional hours of backup power. This is a substantial capacity gap.

2. Power Output

Winner: HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh

The HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh delivers 19.2 kW continuous versus 5 kW. This is enough to run a central AC unit, refrigerator, and general household loads simultaneously. The 14.2 kW power gap significantly impacts what appliances you can run during outages.

3. Chemistry & Longevity

Winner: Tie

Both use LFP chemistry with identical 6,000-cycle ratings. LFP chemistry provides excellent thermal stability, long cycle life, and no cobalt dependency.

4. Round-Trip Efficiency

Winner: HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh

The HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh achieves 96% round-trip efficiency versus 89%. Over 10 years of daily cycling with 15 kWh throughput per day, the more efficient battery saves approximately 575 dollars in energy that would otherwise be lost as heat (at $0.15/kWh). This efficiency gap is significant and meaningfully impacts lifetime economics.

5. Warranty Coverage

Winner: Franklin WH aPower

The Franklin WH aPower offers a 12-year warranty versus 10 years. Consider the remaining warranty period when evaluating total cost of ownership.

Franklin WH aPower

The Franklin WH aPower is a 13.6 kWh LFP battery designed to work with the Franklin aGate energy management gateway for comprehensive whole-home energy control. Its 10 kW peak power capability handles demanding startup surges from appliances like air conditioners and well pumps. With support for up to 15 units, the system scales to 204 kWh for commercial-grade residential applications. The inverter-agnostic AC-coupled design makes it compatible with virtually any existing solar installation, making it one of the most flexible battery options available. Franklin backs it with a 12-year warranty and 43 MWh throughput guarantee.

Pros

  • + Exceptional scalability with up to 15 units for 204 kWh total capacity
  • + 10 kW peak power handles heavy appliance startup surges
  • + Inverter-agnostic AC-coupled design works with any solar system
  • + 12-year warranty with 43 MWh throughput guarantee exceeds industry standard

Cons

  • - Requires the separate aGate unit for full backup and management features
  • - 89% round-trip efficiency is below average for LFP batteries
  • - 5 kW continuous output per unit is modest for the capacity
View full Franklin WH aPower specs →

HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh

The HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh is a large-capacity modular LFP battery system consisting of four 4.8 kWh modules, delivering an exceptional 19.2 kW continuous power at a 1C discharge rate. This power-to-capacity ratio enables whole-home backup including central AC, EV chargers, and major appliances simultaneously. Compatible with Sol-Ark 12K/15K, Schneider XW Pro, and other 48V hybrid inverters. Expandable up to 38.4 kWh with 8 modules. Each module has independent BMS monitoring and fault isolation.

Pros

  • + 19.2 kW continuous power — runs entire household from battery
  • + 19.2 kWh covers most homes through an overnight outage
  • + 100% depth of discharge — full capacity is usable
  • + 1C discharge rate maintained across full state-of-charge range
  • + Modular redundancy — individual module failure doesn't take system offline
  • + Expandable to 38.4 kWh for multi-day backup capability

Cons

  • - 228 kg requires reinforced floor mounting and professional installation
  • - 1.27m tall tower requires significant vertical clearance
  • - Indoor only — needs garage, utility room, or basement
  • - 48V system draws high currents requiring heavy gauge wiring
  • - Most 48V inverters cap at 8-12 kW, bottlenecking the battery's power capability
View full HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh specs →

Choose Franklin WH aPower If...

  • A 12-year warranty gives you the confidence you need
  • You want the flexibility to expand storage capacity over time (up to 15 units)
  • Homeowners who need massive scalability and inverter-agnostic compatibility with a focus on whole-home backup

Choose HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh If...

  • You need more backup storage to cover overnight consumption or extended outages
  • You need to power demanding appliances (AC, EV charger) simultaneously during outages
  • You want to minimize energy losses during daily charge/discharge cycling
  • Large homes seeking maximum backup capacity and power output in a modular system, especially paired with Sol-Ark 15K for high-power whole-home backup.

Our Recommendation

Recommended HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh

The HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh is the decisive winner in this battery comparison, outperforming the Franklin WH aPower in 3 of 5 dimensions. Unless you have a specific requirement that the Franklin WH aPower uniquely addresses, the HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh is the stronger choice for virtually every installation scenario.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Franklin WH aPower or HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh?

The HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh wins this battery comparison by a decisive margin. It delivers 19.2 kWh of usable storage with 19.2 kW continuous output and a 6,000-cycle rating. The 5.6 kWh capacity advantage provides 7 additional hours of essential-load backup.

Which battery lasts longer?

The Franklin WH aPower is rated for 6,000 cycles versus 6,000 for the HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh. Both have identical expected cycle life. LFP chemistry generally outlasts NMC in cycle life testing.

Which battery provides more backup power?

The Franklin WH aPower provides 5 kW continuous (10 kW peak) versus 19.2 kW continuous (19.2 kW peak) for the HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh. HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh can run more appliances simultaneously during an outage. A central AC typically needs 3-5 kW, a refrigerator 0.2 kW, and an EV charger 7-11 kW.

Can I expand Franklin WH aPower or HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh storage later?

Franklin WH aPower: Yes, up to 15 units for 204 kWh total. HomeGrid Stack'd Series 19.2kWh: Yes, up to 8 units for 154 kWh total. Franklin WH aPower offers more expansion potential.

Which battery chemistry is safer?

Both use LFP (Lithium Iron Phosphate) chemistry, which is the safest lithium battery chemistry for residential use. LFP does not undergo thermal runaway, uses no cobalt, and is inherently stable.

Related Resources

Last updated: February 2026