AnkerDirect via Amazon has
Anker 15-in-1 Surge Protector Power Strip w/ 5' Cord (A9192, Black, 2100J) on sale for
$22.78.
Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Thanks to Deal Hunter
phoinix for sharing this deal.
About this Item:
- Multiple Outlets & Ports: 12 AC outlets, 1 USB-C port, 2 USB-A ports for powering appliances and devices.
- Fast Charging: 20W USB-C port charges iPhone 15 from 0-50% in 26 minutes.
- 8-Point Safety System: Includes surge protection, fire resistance, overload protection, temperature control, and more.
- Optimized Layout: Extra space between outlets for large plugs.
- What's Included: Anker 351 Power Strip, 2 mounting screws, welcome guide, 18-month warranty, lifetime $200,000 connected equipment warranty, friendly customer service.
Leave a Comment
Top Comments
https://www.amazon.com/Protector-...0CSCQL6JL/
I have two of these. The USB ports are functional but low power. USB-C only can do 20 watts. When USB-A is active, the total for all 3 ports is 15 watts. Good enough for keeping a flashlight topped off or charging ear buds, but don't expect quick phone charging out of the built in ports.
19 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Will_R
https://www.amazon.com/Protector-...0CSCQL6JL/
I have two of these. The USB ports are functional but low power. USB-C only can do 20 watts. When USB-A is active, the total for all 3 ports is 15 watts. Good enough for keeping a flashlight topped off or charging ear buds, but don't expect quick phone charging out of the built in ports.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank lord_Vader
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank KITHPOM
Also, you don't daisy chain - don't plug one surge protector into another. That leads to overdraw but also more resistance from longer cords.
Also, you don't daisy chain - don't plug one surge protector into another. That leads to overdraw but also more resistance from longer cords.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
At data centers, there exists many outlet power poles specially designed for high utilization (but not necessarily for surge suppression). However, a consumer power 'strip', with THAT MANY outlets... is this even safe
The danger from the octopus mess of cables in the 70s was lack of airflow due to stuff being too tightly packed and the cables themselves blocking air. Modern strips with lots of outlets are more widely spaced. Still, always give bricks room to dissipate heat.
One of my strips currently has 7 things plugged into its 12 AC outlets. 5 of those are battery chargers (Makita, 2 Milwaukee, Skil, and an 18650 charger), a register fan, and a wireless subwoofer. None of the chargers are currently doing anything more than flashing an LED or an LCD screen, and the sub is off. The fan is running so the entire strip may be seeing 20 watts or about 1/6th of an amp. Even if everything was running 100%, the strip might see 7 amps total, and that's being very generous with what the devices might pull. The Makita dual charger alone is over half that possible load.
If you're ever uncertain what something draws, buy a Kill-a-Watt or other energy monitoring sensors.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Leave a Comment