Woot! [woot.com] has for
New Woot Customers: Amazon Basics 5' 3-Outlet 3-USB Port (2 USB A, 1 USB C) Power Strip Extension Cord for $6.99 - $4 for New Customers (no coupon) =
$2.99.
Log in with your Prime account and receive Free Shipping, otherwise it's a flat $6 rate.
Note: It's $6.99 for existing accounts.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank The_Love_Spud
As such, this type of design is handy for occaisionally charging a single device (either up to 12W on a single USB-A or up to 15W on the USB-C) and may even be useful for charging a couple of USB-A devices. However, there's no guarantees as to the speed and stable charging of two devices if, for example, you use the USB-C and one of the USB-A ports. This is even less true if you attempted to actually charge three devices simultaneously. The results in the latter case would, at best, be a slow but functional 5W charging across all three ports. However, just as likely is that one port gets reduced to nothing or next to nothing as the other two ports attempt to max their capabilities. Even worse might be intermittent charging as the ports constantly attempt to renegotiate and rebalance.
Good luck!
Jon
EDIT: I think I got scammed because I clicked Sign Up, but then instead of clicking "create account" I clicked "sign in with Amazon" which just linked the two accounts instead of "creating a new account"
BS
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank JaredR111
As such, this type of design is handy for occaisionally charging a single device (either up to 12W on a single USB-A or up to 15W on the USB-C) and may even be useful for charging a couple of USB-A devices. However, there's no guarantees as to the speed and stable charging of two devices if, for example, you use the USB-C and one of the USB-A ports. This is even less true if you attempted to actually charge three devices simultaneously. The results in the latter case would, at best, be a slow but functional 5W charging across all three ports. However, just as likely is that one port gets reduced to nothing or next to nothing as the other two ports attempt to max their capabilities. Even worse might be intermittent charging as the ports constantly attempt to renegotiate and rebalance.
Good luck!
Jon
EDIT: I think I got scammed because I clicked Sign Up, but then instead of clicking "create account" I clicked "sign in with Amazon" which just linked the two accounts instead of "creating a new account"
BS
As such, this type of design is handy for occaisionally charging a single device (either up to 12W on a single USB-A or up to 15W on the USB-C) and may even be useful for charging a couple of USB-A devices. However, there's no guarantees as to the speed and stable charging of two devices if, for example, you use the USB-C and one of the USB-A ports. This is even less true if you attempted to actually charge three devices simultaneously. The results in the latter case would, at best, be a slow but functional 5W charging across all three ports. However, just as likely is that one port gets reduced to nothing or next to nothing as the other two ports attempt to max their capabilities. Even worse might be intermittent charging as the ports constantly attempt to renegotiate and rebalance.
Good luck!
Jon