💡 Power Up Your Savings!
The SURAIELEC Watt Meter is a cutting-edge plug-in power meter that allows you to monitor your electricity usage in real-time. With features like a large backlit display, 90-day data memory, and overload protection, this device is designed for both safety and efficiency. Its compact design ensures it won't block other outlets, making it perfect for any space. Plus, with professional-grade accuracy, you can track your energy consumption and costs like a pro.
T**M
Good product
Worked well for monitoring my antique GE brass blade fan electrical amp draw
J**S
Good product.
Pretty straight forward, doesn't what it says. Easy to read. Seems like good quality. Reads every voltage and watt i need it too.
J**
Bueno
Funciona perfecto, mide el consumo aunque deberían de especificar cuánto poder de energía resiste. Para saber si de puede conectar a máquina de consumo medio alto
E**O
Buen producto
Amigable y fácil de usar. Muy preciso al momento de entregar datos.
C**.
Excelente medidor
Buen medidor de energía.Puede mostrar el consumo en tiempo real de las Watts y también registra el tiempo de uso largo.
R**S
Used for finding Christmas light voltages.
I purchased this product during Christmas time to see how many Watts my Christmas lights on my house were pulling. I was fearing that I was exceeding my circuit breakers capacity to carry a load. so I purchased this product and plugged all my house lights in and using LED lights. I was floored to learn that I was only pulling 250watts of current I haven’t flipped through any of the other features that this has other than the wattage feature, I briefly scrolled through to see voltage and amperage and other things just out of curiosity, but it worked for my intended purpose. I’m looking to keep it around to see how big of loads my other electrical appliances in my house pull I was hoping to possibly see if this works for appliances to tell me what voltage they’re using when they’re not in use and turned off, but I haven’t tried that out yet.**Overall, good product that does what it says it does and it’s simple design as a place in my book
P**A
The meter reader
I needed something to tell me how much electricity I was using in my place. It’s safe, and small and reliable to read the number. I purchased it and I’m glad I did. It was very helpful for me to understand how much juice I was burning durning the day. Do your math and it will give you an answer.Always, unplug the items when you not using them it will save you money on your bill.
M**L
Cheap and it works, but buttons are poorly designed and there is a significant data accuracy issue
It's functional, and tells you what you need. For the price I am happy with it. It's a lot cheaper than the other name-brand option. However, this thing does have some design flaws which are annoying and can give you bad data.Button design flaw: There's no button to reset the stored min/max wattage reading, besides the full reset button. This is annoying because the full reset is engraved and you need a tool to push it (can't use your finger). Also, using the full reset will reset your price per kWh setting. I'm frustrated that this product was designed with BOTH an "up" and "down" button, which don't seem to do anything except light the LED backlight and help you set the electricity price. Since the price is set per digit, why couldn't they just have had one "set" button (to increment up) and another "zero lo/hi" button?Data accuracy issue with "max wattage" reading: Based on my observation, the electricity monitoring goes into a sort of "sleep" state when the power consumption is 0. The count-up timer will stop when this happens. There is a major issue here, which is it seems to take a few seconds to detect once power has started flowing again. When using the "current wattage" mode, you can still see updated (if laggy) wattage numbers, but THE MAX WATTAGE READING WILL DROP A FEW SECONDS OF DATA. This means that if you have something using 0 watts for a while, then 500 watts for a couple seconds, then 100 watts. you will see those numbers in "current wattage", but in "max wattage" the device will still tell you 100W. This is really a pain when testing something like a refrigerator, which has a power usage pattern like I described above, but I can't see the ACTUAL max wattage unless I'm staring at this thing in "current wattage" mode when the fridge turns on.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
2 days ago