P3 International P4400 Kill A Watt Electricity Usage Monitor | 
enlarge | Brand: P3 International Category: CE
List Price: $34.63 Buy New: $14.55 You Save: $20.08 (58%)
New (79)
Avg. Customer Rating: 278 reviews
Color: Ivory Media: Electronics Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 11.8 x 3 x 7.3 Weight: 5 oz. Dimensions: 5 1/8" X 1 5/8" X 2 3/8" Warranty: 2 years ETL Approved Legal Disclaimer: Warranty does not cover misuse of product.
MPN: P4400 Model: P4400 UPC: 840356945811 EAN: 0751549044009 ASIN: B00009MDBU
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Electricity usage monitor connects to appliances and assesses efficiency | | • | Large LCD display counts consumption by the kilowatt-hour | | • | Calculates electricity expenses by the day, week, month, or year | | • | Displays volts, amps, and wattage within 0.2 percent accuracy | | • | Compatible with inverters; designed for use with AC 115-volt appliances |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Connect your appliances into the Kill A Watt, and assess how efficient they are. A large LCD display counts consumption by the Kilowatt-hour just like utility companies. You can figure out your electrical expenses by the hour, day, week, month, even an entire year. Monitor the quality of your power by displaying Voltage, Line Frequency, and Power Factor
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| Customer Reviews: Read 273 more reviews...
Works, but needs another item purchase July 26, 2008 Works as intended but due to its size on the outlet, its hard to plug other devices into the wall or plug strip when the Kill A Watt is used. So to get around this, you can purchase a short extension cord (1 to 3 feet) and use that. In the end I think regardless if it didn't have this issue, I would have still bought the extension cord just cause it allows it to be used farther away from the wall. Like in my case I bought this to monitor PC power usage and with the extension cord plugged in I can have this bugger sit on my desk in front of me and I can read the statistics and change settings on the fly right at my finger tips.
5 out of 5.
..plan to run around testing all of your electronics... July 20, 2008 Figuring out how much electricity your gadgets ACTUALLY consume is a little addictive. Plan to spend a couple of hours trying this gadget out when you first get it. And while you're having fun doing that, you'll be figuring out which devices are driving up your electricity bills. Does that LCD really save enough power over the CRT to warrant the upgrade? (answer: probably yes)
The negatives: There is no memory, unplug the device and lose the accumulated usage data. C'mon, a capacitor to keep state for a minute would cost pennies. The design will cover at least two plugs in a standard outlet, so I often had to unplug other unrelated gear. The whole design begs for an upward slanted display or a swivel head. Most electrical outlets are installed within a couple of feet of the ground, so combined with no memory once unplugged, this means reading the display requires crouching or crawling, getting under the desk, etc. Ergonomically there's a lot left to desire. The ergonomics are addressed in the more expensive power-strip version of the KillAWatt (P3 P4320 KILL-A-WATT POWER STRIP WITH SURGE PROTECTION)but it would be nice to have in the basic version.
For the price, this is definitely 5 stars, and these guys deserve kudos for this handy, eco-consciousness inspiring tool. But the somewhat awkward design would lead me to give this a 4 star rating if it were any more expensive.
Good tool. July 16, 2008 It is a easy to use monitor. Really knows what equipment are the most that impact your utility bill.
Excellent tool July 15, 2008 This tool is perfect for figuring out just how much energy is being consumed by all those devices you leave plugged in. A surprising amount of energy is wasted in stand by mode and this tool will help you find out just how much energy you are wasting. I highly recommend having one
Easily discover true electricity use July 15, 2008 The Kill A Watt meter is easy to use, just plug it in and then plug in the appliance to be tested for electric use. Findings: My 600 watt coffee maker actually draws 820 watts, a consideration when I have to use a back up generator after a hurricane. Good stuff: my new desktop computer only draws 1 watt on stand-by, compared to my older desktop which draws 20 watts. Really great news: my full size refrigerator only draws 120 watts with the door closed, so I will be easily able to run it on a generator. Also, the unit can be left for 24 hours to measure a day's worth of usage and figure the monthly cost. It shows volts, amps, watts, frequency, and kwh used. This meter will help find energy wasters. I recommend it.
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