Media: Electronics Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Features:
Maximum spike amperage (39,000 amps)?175,000 connected equipment warrantyEight surge-protected sockets for sensitive electronicsBlockSpace allows room for large AC adaptors2 metre (6.5 ft) heavy-duty power cableInternet-ready telephone/f...
Editorial Review:
The Maximum Series offers high-end surge protection for your advanced computers, peripherals, phone/fax, DSL/cable modems, and more. This model boasts 2700 Joules, 75,000 Maximum Spike Amperage, 8-sockets, and a lifetime £175,000 Connected Equipment Warranty.
Customer Reviews:
Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 / 5.0
A well advised purchase, but beware issues with high power draw computers Given that these surge protectors are available at nominal cost and will protect your potentially valuable electronic equipment in the event of a power spike, these items are an obvious purchase for every household. There's not really a lot more to say, except that the build quality of the power strip seems to be high. My only issue I have found is that I sometimes have difficulty persuading my PC to boot when it is powered via the surgemaster. The problem seems to be the initial high power drawer of my... more info
Rubbish for telephone/modem protection According to their customer services department, Belkin used to provide a BT to BT telephone cable with this. But they don't any more. This cable is essential because you can't buy them. All you can buy is BT to RJ11 (the little one - looks like a modem plug). BUT, if you buy an RJ11 to BT adaptor to try and fix the problem, it crosses the connections, so that doesn't work, either. The only way is to either buy a BT to RJ11 crossover cable and one adaptor. Or to buy an RJ11 to RJ11 cable and TWO... more info
Works well Feels solid
Works well
Plenty of space
Cable tidy Worth it for the price
Great...but.... Does the job well but it's been countless times now I've hit the stupidly placed on / off switch with my foot shutting down anything that's plugged in and losing changes on the computer.
A redesign is called for with the switch in a less prominent position.