Select Home Depot Stores: Commercial Electric 6' 12-Outlet Black Surge Protector
$10
$18.88
(Availability/Stock May Vary)
+44Deal Score
32,964 Views
Select Home Depot Stores (product link added as reference) have Commercial Electric 6-Ft 12-Outlet Black Surge Protector on clearance for $10. Product/pricing is valid for in-store purchase only.
Note: Please visit your store to purchase this item on clearance if applicable.
If eligible, you should see a link under the price 'See In-Store Clearance Price'
Thanks to Community Member zzheng for finding this deal.
Product Info:
6x Standard Outlets
6x Spaced Outlets
SJT 14/3 AWG 6-Ft Cord
3x USB 3.1 Amp Always On
4000 Joules Surge Protection
Editor's Notes & Price Research
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About the product:
The 12 Outlet Surge Protector offers superior protection for a wide variety of electronic devices. It features 12 grounded outlets and 3 USB-A ports allowing you to protect multiple devices at the same time and is perfect for your home, office or any location where electronic devices need protection. It is indoor use and suitable for office or general home use.
About the deal:
Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
Not UL certified but it is ETL certified. Also a clamping force of 500v with 330v being recommended and standard. For 10 dollars you get what you get but the info is available for those wondering.
this isn't terrible, it's about as good as you'll get for $10.
for expensive and any electronics where you actually want to protect, you want at most 330v clamping voltage (lower is better)
most of the cheap ones you see on slick deals will have 500v or higher, and shouldn't be used for something you care to protect against surges.
i think there are a few good surge protectors that have clamping voltages 330v or less at around the $20 price range. I think APC is usually recommended, but i'm not an expert.
Thanks. No one ever posts this info and it's the most important stat for a surge protector.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Jonas3
05-05-2024 at 02:37 PM.
Not UL certified but it is ETL certified. Also a clamping force of 500v with 330v being recommended and standard. For 10 dollars you get what you get but the info is available for those wondering.
Not UL certified but it is ETL certified. Also a clamping force of 500v with 330v being recommended and standard. For 10 dollars you get what you get but the info is available for those wondering.
Thanks. No one ever posts this info and it's the most important stat for a surge protector.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank vha23
05-07-2024 at 07:36 AM.
Quote
from jimmybond
:
so... is that like good or bad? no idea what this means. thanks
this isn't terrible, it's about as good as you'll get for $10.
for expensive and any electronics where you actually want to protect, you want at most 330v clamping voltage (lower is better)
most of the cheap ones you see on slick deals will have 500v or higher, and shouldn't be used for something you care to protect against surges.
i think there are a few good surge protectors that have clamping voltages 330v or less at around the $20 price range. I think APC is usually recommended, but i'm not an expert.
Not UL certified but it is ETL certified. Also a clamping force of 500v with 330v being recommended and standard. For 10 dollars you get what you get but the info is available for those wondering.
Good info, thanks. Looked it up myself, and lower is better for these, as they are more sensitive and kick in at the lower voltage. I have Cyber Power brand surge protectors with 400v clamping voltage that I got from a prior SD, but never paid attention to clamping voltage before.
Not UL certified but it is ETL certified. Also a clamping force of 500v with 330v being recommended and standard. For 10 dollars you get what you get but the info is available for those wondering.
Does a 500V clamping voltage mean that this is nothing more than a glorified power strip? Is 500V on the very high end of the range (in a bad way) or are there surge protectors out there that have an even higher clamping voltage?
this isn't terrible, it's about as good as you'll get for $10.
for expensive and any electronics where you actually want to protect, you want at most 330v clamping voltage (lower is better)
most of the cheap ones you see on slick deals will have 500v or higher, and shouldn't be used for something you care to protect against surges.
i think there are a few good surge protectors that have clamping voltages 330v or less at around the $20 price range. I think APC is usually recommended, but i'm not an expert.
where did you get the clamping voltage info from? I just bought a Tripp Lite and didn't see any such info on the data sheet from the MFG site.
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for expensive and any electronics where you actually want to protect, you want at most 330v clamping voltage (lower is better)
most of the cheap ones you see on slick deals will have 500v or higher, and shouldn't be used for something you care to protect against surges.
i think there are a few good surge protectors that have clamping voltages 330v or less at around the $20 price range. I think APC is usually recommended, but i'm not an expert.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank sarcasmogratis
4000 joules surge protection
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Jonas3
Thanks. No one ever posts this info and it's the most important stat for a surge protector.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank vha23
for expensive and any electronics where you actually want to protect, you want at most 330v clamping voltage (lower is better)
most of the cheap ones you see on slick deals will have 500v or higher, and shouldn't be used for something you care to protect against surges.
i think there are a few good surge protectors that have clamping voltages 330v or less at around the $20 price range. I think APC is usually recommended, but i'm not an expert.
This is a new feature
Good info, thanks. Looked it up myself, and lower is better for these, as they are more sensitive and kick in at the lower voltage. I have Cyber Power brand surge protectors with 400v clamping voltage that I got from a prior SD, but never paid attention to clamping voltage before.
Does a 500V clamping voltage mean that this is nothing more than a glorified power strip? Is 500V on the very high end of the range (in a bad way) or are there surge protectors out there that have an even higher clamping voltage?
for expensive and any electronics where you actually want to protect, you want at most 330v clamping voltage (lower is better)
most of the cheap ones you see on slick deals will have 500v or higher, and shouldn't be used for something you care to protect against surges.
i think there are a few good surge protectors that have clamping voltages 330v or less at around the $20 price range. I think APC is usually recommended, but i'm not an expert.