There would be more one star reviews, but it's hard to post from a bed in the hospital burn ward.
Under questions someone said "There is no way this is safe"
A: This power strip is FCC and RoHS certified and has features like surge protection among others against different kinds of hazard, so it is safe for use and please don't worry.
SUPERDANNY Direct Seller · 2 months ago
If I were still doing network closet installs/remodels, I'd seriously buy those by the hundred. Why? Goddamn wall warts.
It's 2022, and there are still terribly designed wall warts with non-standard voltages and all shapes and sizes that come out at all angles from a wall plug, making it so you can have 2 MAYBE 3 of them on a power strip and 4-5 unusable outlets that are blocked by said hideous monstrosity. Very rarely do I come across a sensibly designed wall wart that doesn't block all of the plugs on a power strip, but then again, only in one direction.
That power strip is so large and has so many outlets, it doesn't matter how terrible a hand of garbage wall warts you were dealt, you could shoehorn them all in. And even if you had a mess of wall warts, the total power draw would max be like 5 amps.
The perfect unicorn wall wart is that of a thin brick laid on its side, with a 90 degree rotating plug end on the long side edge. I think I've only ever seen one in my life.
I could see the cube tap being helpful in entertainment setups. My TV has 7 inputs plus the usual outputs for sound. A complete system would have way too many power plugs with about a dozen low power devices each with its own wall wart.
I have a large surge strip behind my L shaped computer desk with 5 computers connected to it. Outside of the computers (which I run 1 at a time or 2 at most) I have things like low powered speakers, switches, scanner, etc. connected to it.
These days most people have a bunch of low powered electrical items and any decently made multi tap will do fine for that as long as its grounded and the over current protection works.
That power strip is so large and has so many outlets, it doesn't matter how terrible a hand of garbage wall warts you were dealt, you could shoehorn them all in. And even if you had a mess of wall warts, the total power draw would max be like 5 amps.
Well, to be fair, most things use a USB supply, so a simple large 5VDC supply to a lot of USB A receptacles could handle things with a single AC plug. Of course, each USB receptacle would be current-limited.