
Mobile Power for Contractors
Bring your own power to the job site.
Solar and lithium battery systems for contractor trailers, tool charging, site lighting, communications, and remote work areas where reliable power keeps the crew moving.
The job site power problem
Power is easy to overlook until it slows the job down. Remote lots may not have utility service yet. Remodels may have limited circuits. Residential customers may not want cords running through the house. Generators can be loud, need fuel, and create one more maintenance item when crews are trying to stay productive.
A solar and battery system gives contractors a quieter base layer of power for the tools and equipment that need to work every day.
A mobile charging hub for the crew
- Charge cordless tool batteries through the day.
- Run site lighting, routers, tablets, laptops, and radios.
- Support enclosed job trailers, service vehicles, and remote work zones.
- Reduce generator run time for everyday support loads.
Built around the way your crew works
We design around actual job site use, including cordless tool charging, lighting, job trailer office loads, communications, and selected equipment where the load profile supports it.
Tool Charging Trailer
Best for crews that mainly need battery charging, lighting, and electronics inside an enclosed trailer or mobile service vehicle.
Job Site Support
Best for longer workdays, site office loads, lighting, communications, and selected tools with a generator kept as backup for peak demand.
Remote Work Power
Best for rural construction, outbuildings, temporary work zones, and sites before utility service is available.
Generator-first vs. self-powered trailer
| Job site need | Generator-first approach | Solar + battery trailer |
|---|---|---|
| Daily tool charging | Run generator or find an outlet. | Charge quietly from stored power. |
| Remote setup | Bring fuel and manage run time. | Arrive with stored energy and solar charging. |
| Customer impact | Noise, fumes, cords, and access requests. | Cleaner setup with less disruption. |
| Maintenance | Engine service and fuel logistics. | Minimal routine maintenance. |
Frequently asked questions
Can a solar trailer run power tools?
It depends on the tool. Battery chargers, lights, laptops, routers, and many small loads are straightforward. Larger corded tools and compressors require inverter sizing, battery capacity, and starting-surge review.
Can this replace temporary power?
Sometimes for early-stage or light-duty work. For a full construction site with heavy equipment, it may be better as a support system that reduces generator use and keeps critical tools charged until utility power is available.
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 power source?
Bring your equipment list and we will help determine what solar and battery power can support on your job sites.