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Sold By | Sale Price |
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Ace Hardware | $22.99 |
Product Name: | Woods 50012WD Outdoor 24-Hour Heavy Duty Mechanical Plug-In Timer 2 Grounded Outlets |
Product Description: | Woods 15A 1875W 2 Outlet Outdoor 24 Hour Heavy Duty Mechanical Timer 3/4 HP 3 Conductor Turns Outdoor Appliances On & Off Specially Designed To Work With Portable Pools Spa Filter Pumps Patio Or Garden Fountains Car Heating Accessories Outdoor Lighting & Other Heavy Duty Outdoor Appliances 15 LA 90 LRA. The forest green blends into landscapes and gardens; place this discreet timer on your patio or next to bushes. A semi-transparent lid protects the pin dial from damage and weather resistant housing is designed for extreme weather conditions. The Outdoor Mechanical 3-Conductor 2-Outlet Timer is ideal for outdoor lighting and seasonal decorations. |
Product SKU: | 21682996 |
UPC: | 78693500121 |
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9 Comments
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If you look hard enough, your local Home Depot might still have the $5 wyze outdoor outlet that also does energy monitoring.
Got one of the woods digital timers, but it doesn't hold the schedule if the power "blips" or the device gets bumped, and has to be reset repeatedly for year round use device.
Looks like they built in the shipping charge (since the shipping is "free"). The question is whether or not it was free at the lower price? The OP indicates that it wasn't. It's rare, but sometimes they'll either lose money or make pennies in profits just to get rid of inventory that's growing mold!
Looks like Walmart sold out and now it's a 3rd party vendor. It has been marked as expired.
Correct! I didn't notice that originally. It's likely that there was a $6.99 shipping charge previously, so if anyone still needs this, it only costs $1 more this way.
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Got one of the woods digital timers, but it doesn't hold the schedule if the power "blips" or the device gets bumped, and has to be reset repeatedly for year round use device.
Why not plug the timer into a separate battery backup? That might provide more versatility than a combination device (if that type of device even exists).
Got one of the woods digital timers, but it doesn't hold the schedule if the power "blips" or the device gets bumped, and has to be reset repeatedly for year round use device.
I think the easiest way is to get a smart outlet that's rated for 15A.
Presumably any brief power loss would just result in a brief disconnect before re establishing Wifi and resuming the program.
Only concern would be if the device defaults to on or off after power loss (as opposed to remembering what it was set to at the time of the outage). But it would only be incorrect until the next programmed action