
Mobile Power for Contractors
Quiet job-site power for contractors.
Solar and lithium storage for trailer lighting, tool charging, communications, and site office loads, sized around how your specific needs.
A quieter power base for active job sites
Temporary power gets messy fast. Remote lots may not have service yet, power may be disconnected. Extension cords running to your trailer can get crushed and destroyed by heavy equipment. Generators can cover heavy loads, but they are noisy, fuel-dependent, and often oversized for all-day support tasks.
A solar and battery trailer gives the crew a cleaner base layer for the loads that need to work all day. Power available when you need it without setup and without noise.

Common daily support loads
- Cordless tool battery charging between tasks.
- Trailer lights, routers, laptops, tablets, and radios.
- Task lighting for early starts, late finishes, and enclosed work.
- Generator backup is available for those long dark winter days, but typically rarely needed.
Designed around the loads that slow crews down
We start with your trailer, workday, generator use, and equipment list. Then we size the solar, battery, inverter, and charging plan around your loads.
Tool Charging
A modern job site uses a variety of battery powered tools which gives you great flexibility to operate across the job site without cords. However, many contractors find themselves hauling piles of batteries back home to charge every night and then having to remember to get those batteries put them back in their vehicle. This can be eliminated by simply charging your batteries on site in your job trailer and never having to worry about bringing your work home every night.
Job Site Power Support
Power your heavier loads such as compressors, table saws, miter saws, etc.
Plug your corded tools directly into the trailer and experience near-unlimited energy while the sun is shining.
Office Work Remotely
Charge your laptop, power starlink, power your printer, and keep up with your office work on the go.
No need to find a Starbucks wifi to send quotes and talk with suppliers. We can set you up with fully remote communications that work even where there’s no cell service or power infrastructure. As an added bonus, Wi-Fi will enable your employees to stay connected with their loved ones when cell service is unavailable.
Generator vs. Solar Trailer Power
| Job site need | Without a Jobsite Solar Trailer | Solar + battery trailer |
|---|---|---|
| Daily tool charging | Keep a generator running or use an inverter powered off your vehicle and risk not being able to start your truck at the end of the day. | Convenient always-on quiet charging. Your batteries are full when you need them. |
| Trailer office and comms | Sitting in your pickup putting idle hours on the engine and burning fuel while trying to fit your laptop and cell phone around the steering wheel. Sometimes having to drive to find good service or Wi-Fi. | Plug in your laptop, charge your phone, even run Starlink for remote connectivity. All without noise and fuel burn. |
| Compressed Air, Saws, etc | Bring a generator if job site power is not available, then run the noisy generator and compressor for the entirety of the workday. Adds additional noise fatigue to an already noisy jobsite, as well as adding the generator as a maintenance item and the cost of fuelburn. | Arrive with stored energy and recharge from solar. Air compressor runs when needed. Quiet cheap power when you need it, where you need it. |
Frequently asked questions
Can a solar trailer run power tools?
Yes. The trailer will run Battery chargers, lights, laptops, saws, compressors. Pretty much and load you would run off a household 120 volt circuit with run fine. Running multiple power tools simultaneously will require adequately sizing the systems for your expected loads.
Can this replace temporary power?
Yes, in most cases. If your temporary power needs are primarily around supporting jobsite power tools, then yes. If your needs are to run welders or using electrical resistance heaters, a generator may be required.
Can it be installed in an existing trailer?
Often, yes. We review roof space, structure, battery location, ventilation, wiring paths, and how the crew uses the trailer before finalizing the design.
Ready to make your trailer the hub of your workforce?
Bring your trailer details, tool list, and generator pain points. We will map what solar and lithium can carry and where a generator should remain backup.