Judson Graf
Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2025
No complaints
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2025
Easy to set up banded the plugs in a room that needed them.
Heidi Colton
Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2025
Great product!
ADK EMT
Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2025
This product exceeded my expectations. So easy to install and designed to meet the needs of the day. Not only adds FOUR outlets, but those outlets are spaced so you can place today's large plugs.
BC
Reviewed in the United States on January 4, 2025
did not fit in the tight space I needed it for, but nice and works
Brian Miller
Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2025
works as it should
Alberto
Reviewed in Mexico on October 24, 2024
Funcionó correctamente solo q si un poco más grande de lo que esperaba
SNZYS
Reviewed in Mexico on August 3, 2023
Buen extensor de enchufes , convierte tus 2 enchufes en 6. Fácil de colocar y trae un tornillo para fijarla a tu placa , lo que la hace muy práctica ya que cuando retiras un cable , no te viene todo junto. Material quizá no de lo mejor , pero aguantador !!
Miguel Lopez
Reviewed in Mexico on August 26, 2021
Me gusto el diseño y sobretodo la funcionalidad que tiene. Me ayudo bastante para el area donde tengo mis conexiones de red en casa, para organizar y conectar todos mis equipos. Muy facil de usar y muy practico. Lo recomiendo ampliamente.
Cristian H.
Reviewed in Mexico on June 18, 2020
Los compré para utilizar en la cocina y estoy muy satisfecho con el resultado, puedo tener varios aparatos conectados, ya no necesito desconectar alguno para poder conectar otro. La apariencia que queda es mucho mas limpia que dejar una tira multicontactos. Algo a tener en cuenta es que si lo vas a dejar permanente debes de tener tomas de luz de dos clavijas (con tierra) y que entre ambas tenga un pequeño orificio para introducir y atornillar para que quede suficientemente fijo, sino ajustas el tornillo tiende a moverse ligeramente si conectas cargadores o algo pesado. Hay un modelo que tiene protección contra picos, si le van a conectar aparatos costosos recomendaría instalar ese, aunque ese modelo no se puede ajustar con tornillo.
Steve
Reviewed in Canada on October 10, 2020
This cheaply and effectively helped me get all my countertop appliances and lighting connected in the kitchen. It does come out of the socket a little bit easily, so now I have to hold it instead of just yanking on the cord, but I can't see how this would be avoided in any alternative product (it does have the bolt hole to bolt into the wall but there's no hole in that location on my outlets).
Mike Eckman
Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2013
I had a couple of outlets in my house that I was always having to swap plugs in and out of. I could have used a regular surge/power strip, but that would have involved having something hang from the wall, so I looked for something that would screw into the wall and give me more outlets and this was what I chose to go with. I love how the outlets are not all facing the same direction. You get two on each angled side of the outlet and two front facing ones that can handle a wall wart of any size.Reading some other reviews, people knocked this unit for taking power from only one outlet in the back. There is a plastic nub that goes into the 3rd prong of the 2nd outlet to help hold the weight, but I don't see this as a con, since if I had a power strip, everything would be taking power from the same physical plug anyway.Another review knocked this because plugging too many devices overloaded his circuit. This person obviously doesn't understand how residential power works. In any residential circuit, you have either a fuse or a breaker which dictates the maximum amount of power that circuit can handle. Most residential circuits in the US are either 15A or 20A circuits. To determine the maximum amount of power (watts) a circuit can handle, you take the A rating and multiple that by the voltage (which is always 120v in the US). So a 15A circuit can handle 1800 watts. A 20A circuit can handle 2400 watt. Go too far beyond this limit and you will trip/blow the breaker/fuse. This applies to ALL electrical outlets in a given cirtcuit, so adding a surge/power strip or an outlet adapter like this, does not increase the capacity of that circuit. You still run the same risk of overloading that circuit as before using this device. Pay attention to the wattage of your devices you are using. If you are not sure of how much power your devices us, I recommend getting something like a Kill-A-Watt which can measure it for you.Anyway, this is a great piece that secures to the wall with a screw in the middle. Some reviews mentioned that they broke the screw when tightening this down. I didn't have such a problem with either of the 3 that I bought.Finally, this is made by GE, which made me feel a little more comfortable regarding its quality.5 stars, all the way!
JeriOwl
Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2012
I bought several of these GE wall adapters locally a couple years ago and realized I needed more but couldn't find them locally then recently stumbled into them here on Amazon when I was looking at 12 outlet power strips for the entertainment center.The GE wall adapters have proven reliable- they've been in use for several years without any issue, ever. They are versatile - I've managed to plug in SIX WALL WARTS simultaneously in a discrete outlet, most handy! (I challenge most 6 outlet power strips to handle that task!) It is economical - cheaper than many power strips. It is unobtrusive- it discretely performs it's task with less mess and fuss than a power strip sprawled on the floor dangling from an outlet- you know whence I speak......and it's so useful! I've used these in a bathroom to keep very low wattage LED strips illuminated 24x7 as a "night light" for my aging husband's eyes, yet the front outlets are still always available for the vacuum, the hair trimmer, the hair dryer and the water pik. I've used these behind a couch to plug in lamps and cell phone chargers on the side without crimping the cord and hence reducing a potential fire risk. I've used these outlets in a kitchen to again discretely plug in the various counter appliances including blenders while keeping the front outlets handy and available - * though a word of caution- be careful plugging multiple high energy devices in and *using them simultaneously*, such as several rock pots, roasters, coffee pots, etc - even the typical house wiring is not likely to handle such a high demand load on a single circuit- especially older homes! - so please use common sense when using any outlet expander.I highly recommend and feel these are safe when used wisely!