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expireddailydealsforme posted Mar 04, 2025 08:54 AM
expireddailydealsforme posted Mar 04, 2025 08:54 AM

Yintar 18-Outlet Surge Protector Power Strip w/ 6-Ft Cord

$12

$24

50% off
Amazon
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ANDAXING TECH via Amazon has Yintar 18-Outlet Surge Protector Power Strip w/ 6-Ft Cord (Black) on sale for $11.99. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+ orders.

Thanks to Community Member dailydealsforme for finding this deal.

Product Info:
  • 18 AC Outlets
  • 6-Feet Flat Plug Heavy Duty Power Extension Cord (1875W/15A)
  • Surge Protector (2100 Joules)

Editor's Notes

Written by SlickDealio
  • About the deal:
    • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • About the store:

Original Post

Written by dailydealsforme
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
ANDAXING TECH via Amazon has Yintar 18-Outlet Surge Protector Power Strip w/ 6-Ft Cord (Black) on sale for $11.99. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+ orders.

Thanks to Community Member dailydealsforme for finding this deal.

Product Info:
  • 18 AC Outlets
  • 6-Feet Flat Plug Heavy Duty Power Extension Cord (1875W/15A)
  • Surge Protector (2100 Joules)

Editor's Notes

Written by SlickDealio
  • About the deal:
    • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • About the store:

Original Post

Written by dailydealsforme

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Top Comments

RelaxedCreature628
63 Posts
14 Reputation
450 clamping voltage.

ETL and UL. However, only UL STD. 1363. 1363 is only for basic power strip wiring, no surge protection. My APC surge protector has both 1363 and 1449. 1449 is for surge protection.
poptorts
847 Posts
321 Reputation
This looks like a fire waiting to happen.
zheka160
1662 Posts
5232 Reputation
I can finally plug in 9 microwaves and 9 space heaters all at once. This is a fire deal!!

62 Comments

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Mar 06, 2025 04:28 PM
3,233 Posts
Joined Nov 2012
ablangMar 06, 2025 04:28 PM
3,233 Posts
So I have multiple things plugged into multiple outlets.

How do we know that combining them all into this one isn't going to burn the house down?
1
Mar 06, 2025 06:21 PM
1,059 Posts
Joined Jun 2018
JasonSternMar 06, 2025 06:21 PM
1,059 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank JasonStern

Quote from Taco :
Let's start mathing...
200w for your TV,
200w for your PS5,
100w for your soundbar,
2x 65w for your fast charge phone charger and your friends,
2x 30w for your nifty led bar,
15w for your firestick,
40w for your echo,
20w for your digital clock

That's 10 plugs and you still have 1k watts of head space before you trip a breaker.
We're not talking wattage, we're talking amperage.

Average TV amperage: 0.5-2A
AV Receiver: 5-15A
Subwoofer: 5-20A
Fast charger: 1.5-3A each
Gaming PC: 4-6A
Or XBox Series X: 3A
12 more plug-ins to go...

And, potential fire. Nobody is questioning that you can drive a few box fans, LED lamps, and USB2.0 (0.5A) powered devices with this. The point that everyone but you is trying to make is that caution is needed when plugging 18 devices into any power strip, especially an unvetted budget Chinese one.

Hundreds of fires have been caused by Chinese power strips. When multiple high-amperage items are plugged in, the strips often melt down and ignite a fire. Source:
https://alu.army.mil/alog/2012/ma...nments.pdf
2
Mar 07, 2025 09:21 PM
8,147 Posts
Joined Jul 2016
Frank_NittyMar 07, 2025 09:21 PM
8,147 Posts
At $12, I don't expect this power strip to be that reliable...
1
Mar 08, 2025 01:11 AM
494 Posts
Joined Aug 2014
KonradenMar 08, 2025 01:11 AM
494 Posts
Quote from JasonStern :
We're not talking wattage, we're talking amperage.

Average TV amperage: 0.5-2A
AV Receiver: 5-15A
Subwoofer: 5-20A
Fast charger: 1.5-3A each
Gaming PC: 4-6A
Or XBox Series X: 3A
12 more plug-ins to go...

And, potential fire. Nobody is questioning that you can drive a few box fans, LED lamps, and USB2.0 (0.5A) powered devices with this. The point that everyone but you is trying to make is that caution is needed when plugging 18 devices into any power strip, especially an unvetted budget Chinese one.

Hundreds of fires have been caused by Chinese power strips. When multiple high-amperage items are plugged in, the strips often melt down and ignite a fire. Source:
https://alu.army.mil/alog/2012/ma...nments.pdf
Yo dawg. Your USB device is drawing 0.5a at 5v. The wall wart is pulling 120v at 20 milliamps.

Wattage is a perfectly fine to measure here unless you're calculating all of the amperage at 120v, which I know you're not doing because you just said my phones fast charger is drawing 300w.
1
Mar 08, 2025 01:49 AM
263 Posts
Joined Mar 2019
majestic2020Mar 08, 2025 01:49 AM
263 Posts
This is a fire sale!! 👀
1
Mar 08, 2025 01:55 AM
6,274 Posts
Joined Dec 2009
wwjrdMar 08, 2025 01:55 AM
6,274 Posts
Quote from zheka160 :
I can finally plug in 9 microwaves and 9 space heaters all at once. This is a fire deal!!
Save a couple slots for some air fryers.
1
1
Mar 08, 2025 10:53 PM
1,059 Posts
Joined Jun 2018
JasonSternMar 08, 2025 10:53 PM
1,059 Posts
Quote from Konraden :
Yo dawg. Your USB device is drawing 0.5a at 5v. The wall wart is pulling 120v at 20 milliamps.

Wattage is a perfectly fine to measure here unless you're calculating all of the amperage at 120v, which I know you're not doing because you just said my phones fast charger is drawing 300w.
Not sure what you are even arguing here.
I'm not arguing that low wattage chargers don't exist.
Modern GaN chargers draw more current. That's how they fast charge, and how you can run things like laptops off of them. And many modern chargers have multiple USB ports. Add them up and 240 watts (which would be 2 amps) peak from a charger is not uncommon.
It's not my house. If you want to plug 18 of these cheap Chinese power strips into one of these cheap Chinese power strips and have 324 devices running out of the same socket, have fun. Not my house.

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Mar 08, 2025 11:03 PM
15,546 Posts
Joined Nov 2019
LilylyMar 08, 2025 11:03 PM
15,546 Posts
Quote from FreshPrinceSumNLips :
Penny wise pound foolish. Try explaining to AllState why they should rebuild your house when you used a $12 dolla no name company strip like this?
when was the last time you saw it on a news that a surger protector caused the whole house burned down
Mar 09, 2025 12:04 AM
9,521 Posts
Joined Aug 2003
ikonoklastMar 09, 2025 12:04 AM
9,521 Posts
18 outlets? Ridiculous.
Mar 09, 2025 12:46 AM
494 Posts
Joined Aug 2014
KonradenMar 09, 2025 12:46 AM
494 Posts
Quote from JasonStern :
Not sure what you are even arguing here.
I'm not arguing that low wattage chargers don't exist.
Modern GaN chargers draw more current. That's how they fast charge, and how you can run things like laptops off of them. And many modern chargers have multiple USB ports. Add them up and 240 watts (which would be 2 amps) peak from a charger is not uncommon.
It's not my house. If you want to plug 18 of these cheap Chinese power strips into one of these cheap Chinese power strips and have 324 devices running out of the same socket, have fun. Not my house.
No you're just arguing that amperage matters and then completely calculating the wrong amperage. It's fine, you're allowed to be wrong.
Mar 09, 2025 09:35 PM
2,154 Posts
Joined Aug 2015
RedflyerMar 09, 2025 09:35 PM
2,154 Posts
Yintar and the Golden Lance
Mar 10, 2025 03:29 AM
1,059 Posts
Joined Jun 2018
JasonSternMar 10, 2025 03:29 AM
1,059 Posts
Quote from Konraden :
No you're just arguing that amperage matters and then completely calculating the wrong amperage. It's fine, you're allowed to be wrong.
Current = Watts / Voltage. Watt's law.
240W charger / 120V outlet = 2 amps peak. Feel free to correct the math.
"Well, you're wrong!"

The National Electrical Code (NEC) suggests a maximum load of 80% of the outlet's rating, meaning a continuous load of 12 amps is recommended.
"Well, you're wrong! And the NEC is wrong!"

Again, here's a document provided by the military citing that Chinese power strips tend to cut corners during construction and should not be used in high current applications due to fire hazard risks:
https://alu.army.mil/alog/2012/ma...nments.pdf
As such, I would probably go lower in peak amperage.
"Well, you're wrong! And the military, with their research is also wrong!"

Tough to debate such strong arguments you have.

Again, I really don't care what you do. If you want to rig something up pulling 50A through a $12 power strip (larger main breaker, jumper the surge protector), have fun. Not my house at risk. Just trying to keep other people safe.
Mar 10, 2025 04:59 AM
494 Posts
Joined Aug 2014
KonradenMar 10, 2025 04:59 AM
494 Posts
Quote from JasonStern :
Current = Watts / Voltage. Watt's law.
240W charger / 120V outlet = 2 amps peak. Feel free to correct the math.
"Well, you're wrong!"

The National Electrical Code (NEC) suggests a maximum load of 80% of the outlet's rating, meaning a continuous load of 12 amps is recommended.
"Well, you're wrong! And the NEC is wrong!"

Again, here's a document provided by the military citing that Chinese power strips tend to cut corners during construction and should not be used in high current applications due to fire hazard risks:
https://alu.army.mil/alog/2012/ma...nments.pdf
As such, I would probably go lower in peak amperage.
"Well, you're wrong! And the military, with their research is also wrong!"

Tough to debate such strong arguments you have.

Again, I really don't care what you do. If you want to rig something up pulling 50A through a $12 power strip (larger main breaker, jumper the surge protector), have fun. Not my house at risk. Just trying to keep other people safe.
Look I'm happy you're learning, but your comment here about USB2.0 demonstrates just how profoundly ignorant you were. I know you didn't both to go through and actually read and understand what you were googling when you typed in "how many amps subwoofer."


Quote :
Average TV amperage: 0.5-2A
I could believe there are some old Plasma's that might be 250 watts.

Quote :
AV Receiver: 5-15A
Nobody has an 1800w RMS A\V Receiver in their household, and it sure as hell isn't paired with a

Quote :
Subwoofer: 5-20A
2400w RMS subwoofer.

Don't get me wrong, these components exist--but they're not items in your house.

https://www.amazon.com/LG-Sound-S...09615?th=1

This outrageous 9.2.5 surround system is 810w.

Quote :
Fast charger: 1.5-3A each
This number you're citing is the same mistake you made with USB2. USB 3.0's original spec was 20v charging is limited to 3a, 60w. That's 120VAC at 0.5a.
.
Current spec I believe is now 240w max--2A, which last I looked, nothing is using.

For context you can plug 18 65w chargers into this power strip, plug in 18 dead phones into those chargers, and you'd be drawing short of 10 amps of current, well within the limits of the typical home's 15a cricuit. I'd be more concerned about the heat generation.

Quote :
Gaming PC: 4-6A
Or XBox Series X: 3A
12 more plug-ins to go...
I can't actually find Microsoft's spec sheet on the Xbox but realworld testing form a couple of websites showing <200w. But fark it, we'll go with 3a here and 8a for a gaming rig.

Are you pluggin in your $5000 gaming computer, your Xbox with Plasma TV:: And playing both, your 9.2.5 Surround Sound--at full volume mind you--, charging a your gaming laptop from the future, a dead phone, a dead tablet, and turning on a 300w halogen lamp? Because your circuit breakers are going to trip.

So let's take my real actual entertainment area and start adding shit until I fill up 18 plugs.

TV: 120w
Xbox One: 120W
PS3: 140W
HDMI Switch: 12W
Network Switch: 12W
Nintendo Switch: 65W
SteamDeck: 65W
Controller Charger (x3) 12w
Surround Sound: 240W

That's 11 items.

Let's use 65w chargers for my tablet, and my phone.
I'll plug my laptop in too. That's 65W
Another 5W for this USB LED light strip
This lamp. It's LED but let's pretend I stick a 100W incandescent bulb in there instead.
And I'll plug my 300w halogen standing lamp in too.

If I max out everything on these it's 1386w

17 plugs (many of which probably won't fit). 1386w.

IDK about you but I don't use all this stuff, at max, all at once.

Can I even get to 1800w sitting in here? 100W cab, 25w cab, maybe all these pedals could add up to another 100w, my bookshelf speakers 100w rms.

I'm at 1711W and I'm out of things in this room to plug in to a single circuit, much less stuff that'll reasonably fit on a single surge protector even with 18 receptacles.


Quit trying to justify your very ignorant numbers.

I'll jam a fork into the last slot because this conversation is done.
Mar 11, 2025 05:01 PM
2 Posts
Joined Oct 2014
King-Lucifer19Mar 11, 2025 05:01 PM
2 Posts
I think I saw a YouTuber test one of these and it's not great 😁

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Mar 12, 2025 12:49 AM
803 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
FreshPrinceSumNLipsMar 12, 2025 12:49 AM
803 Posts
Quote from Lilyly :
when was the last time you saw it on a news that a surger protector caused the whole house burned down
You could be next. Go ahead. Penny wise pound foolish.

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