can't seem to find the link on Amazon product page anymore to tell them about a lower price (?)
kester76
21 Jul 16#28
Green surge light goes out.
Spikecast
21 Jul 16#29
Collected mine from Darlington (ordered two). Actually needed 3 so I managed to get another off the shelf. £8.91 in total. What a bargain!
guttediam
21 Jul 16#30
Guttediam because none in a 55 mile radius of Bournemouth, nice find Op heat added
Kulaak
21 Jul 161#31
Ho hum, offer must have been on for a while. Nearest stock for me is Lowestoft which is 80 miles away! Luckily don't need it lol.
Agent004
21 Jul 16#32
Good spot op, these always come in handy :sunglasses:
ElectricalStorm
21 Jul 16#33
OOS
Sorry, no stores local to you currently have the item(s) you have selected in stock.
We've searched a 321.4 mile radius of ****************, London SW18 ****, United Kingdom.
pentekmisi
21 Jul 16#34
thanks for posting, bought one :smiley:
evilcod 2009
21 Jul 16#35
thanks got the last two from festival Park store :smile:
psd99
21 Jul 16#36
good deal but none near me
moneysavingkitten
21 Jul 16#37
Also the warranty expires after 3 years. So you no long have the £1000 protection if something blows up, even if the lights haven't gone out.
But NONE within a several Mile radius from me in London!. :-(
Like WOW!.
Does anyone have some Delivery Codes for this please?, so I can rather ..... hehehehe, thanx in advance. :-)
xdash
21 Jul 16#41
Reserved last one in Gloucester, paid in store didn't it, get epic wait to get refund as staff kept ask another person to do the refund till I got annoyed
snappyfish
21 Jul 16#42
Barley no stock. I'd have better luck finding a 8tb Western Digital network attached storage device at tesco's for £4.99
Handy comment off Toms Hardware
"If surges exist as popular myths claim, then you are replacing daily GFCI, dimmer switches, and clock radios. Things that are less robust. Typically destructive surges occur maybe once every seven years. That noise that others hype as a surge is made completely irrelevant by protection already inside every appliance including GFCIs, dimmer switches, and clock radios.
Your concern is the surge that overwhelms that protection. No plug-in protector will discuss it. No plug-in protector even claims protection in its numeric specs. But most that make recommendations routinely ignore numbers. Only recommend what urban myths promotes.
$30 per appliance for protection is grossly overpriced. For over 100 years, protection where damage must never happen costs about $1 per protected appliance. And it mostly unknown to the majority who do not even know how electricity works. View spec sheets from APC, Belkin, Tripplite, or Monster Cable. Where is the numeric spec that claims protection? Does not exist. Take a $3 power strip. Add some ten cent protector parts. Sell l it to the naive for $30 or $150. Why make protection claims? Sell a magic box for obscene profits and majority will recommend it.
Now, no protector is protection. Nada. The only effective protector connects to protection. Protection is always about where energy dissipated. Always. Either the effective protector connects short (ie 'less that 10 feet') to protection. Or it somehow must make energy magically disappear. That is what others have recommended. A magic box that makes energy disappear.
Again, view its spec numbers. How many joules will it absorb? Hundreds? The typically destructive surge - the one that can overwhelm protection inside appliances (computer) is hundred of thousands of joules. How does that ineffective protector absorb that energy? It does not.
What it does do is fail. A surge too tiny to harm the computer, GFCI, dimmer switch or clock radio easily destroys the grossly undersized protection. That gets the naive to recommend that protector. The term 'junk science' is appropriate. They observed damage. Assumed without any electrical knowledge. Then said, "My protector sacrificed itself to save my computer." And so the myth lives on.
Reality - protection inside the computer, TV, GFCI, dimmer switch, etc protected each appliance. If the protector did anything, they you have a long list of appliances all damaged - including dishwasher, furnace, stove, or air conditioner.
This post is about the popular myth. A $3 power strip with some ten cent protector parts that sells in the grocery store for $7. Or same protector circuit sells with hyped brand names (and no specs that even claim protection) for $25 or $120. Your choice. Buy the scam. Or read the next post to learn what is routinely done even 100 years ago to have no damage. Forget to read manufacturer specs that do not even claim surge protection. A majority only learn from advertising - fail to learn how protection is really done."
If you are that paranoid about your kit and setup then get an electrician to put one of these in for £12
amour3k
21 Jul 16#46
Amen to that!!! .. Amazon, price match this too plezzzzzzzzzzzzzzz???, heheheh. :-)
Opening post
The Masterplug SRG62BX-MP 6-gang Extension Cable enables you to plug in multiple devices even when just one single wall socket is available.
Featuring power and surge neon indicators which show when the lead is being used, the SRG62BX-MP boasts 6 safety shuttered sockets.
With its 13 amp fused plug, the 2m SRG62BX-MP 6-gang Extension Cable from Masterplug is suitable for most appliances.
Instore or free to reserve and collect.
bb8 ;)
All comments (62)
I just rebuilt by PC room. Double PC setup, with numerous powered peripherals.
I used the switched version of this exact extension. And paid WAY more than this for them.
So heat from me also.
Any suggestions would be appreciated!
Protected extension
Apparently closed from exeter as well!
(I would also like to think you have a way of testing it's not just the LED that's packed in as well)
wish Amazon would price match
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Masterplug-SRG62-MP-6-Gang-Protected-Extension/dp/B000GJCSV4/
currently £11.20
can't seem to find the link on Amazon product page anymore to tell them about a lower price (?)
Sorry, no stores local to you currently have the item(s) you have selected in stock.
We've searched a 321.4 mile radius of ****************, London SW18 ****, United Kingdom.
But NONE within a several Mile radius from me in London!. :-(
Like WOW!.
Does anyone have some Delivery Codes for this please?, so I can rather ..... hehehehe, thanx in advance. :-)
http://www.hotukdeals.com/deals/power-pro-4-way-switched-extension-socket-with-usb-2m-5-99-home-bargains-instore-2477619?p=28425636
"If surges exist as popular myths claim, then you are replacing daily GFCI, dimmer switches, and clock radios. Things that are less robust. Typically destructive surges occur maybe once every seven years. That noise that others hype as a surge is made completely irrelevant by protection already inside every appliance including GFCIs, dimmer switches, and clock radios.
Your concern is the surge that overwhelms that protection. No plug-in protector will discuss it. No plug-in protector even claims protection in its numeric specs. But most that make recommendations routinely ignore numbers. Only recommend what urban myths promotes.
$30 per appliance for protection is grossly overpriced. For over 100 years, protection where damage must never happen costs about $1 per protected appliance. And it mostly unknown to the majority who do not even know how electricity works. View spec sheets from APC, Belkin, Tripplite, or Monster Cable. Where is the numeric spec that claims protection? Does not exist. Take a $3 power strip. Add some ten cent protector parts. Sell l it to the naive for $30 or $150. Why make protection claims? Sell a magic box for obscene profits and majority will recommend it.
Now, no protector is protection. Nada. The only effective protector connects to protection. Protection is always about where energy dissipated. Always. Either the effective protector connects short (ie 'less that 10 feet') to protection. Or it somehow must make energy magically disappear. That is what others have recommended. A magic box that makes energy disappear.
Again, view its spec numbers. How many joules will it absorb? Hundreds? The typically destructive surge - the one that can overwhelm protection inside appliances (computer) is hundred of thousands of joules. How does that ineffective protector absorb that energy? It does not.
What it does do is fail. A surge too tiny to harm the computer, GFCI, dimmer switch or clock radio easily destroys the grossly undersized protection. That gets the naive to recommend that protector. The term 'junk science' is appropriate. They observed damage. Assumed without any electrical knowledge. Then said, "My protector sacrificed itself to save my computer." And so the myth lives on.
Reality - protection inside the computer, TV, GFCI, dimmer switch, etc protected each appliance. If the protector did anything, they you have a long list of appliances all damaged - including dishwasher, furnace, stove, or air conditioner.
This post is about the popular myth. A $3 power strip with some ten cent protector parts that sells in the grocery store for $7. Or same protector circuit sells with hyped brand names (and no specs that even claim protection) for $25 or $120. Your choice. Buy the scam. Or read the next post to learn what is routinely done even 100 years ago to have no damage. Forget to read manufacturer specs that do not even claim surge protection. A majority only learn from advertising - fail to learn how protection is really done."
If you are that paranoid about your kit and setup then get an electrician to put one of these in for £12
http://www.hotukdeals.com/deals/pro-elec-10-gang-surge-protected-extension-tower-2-for-11-88-delivered-cpc-farnell-2479334
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