Description






Price: $23.01 – $20.04
Details)
The CyberPower P705G is a commercial and residential surge protector for personal computers, large flat screen TVs, printers, speakers, scanners and home electronics. It offers seven (7) total surge protected outlets and four (4) Energy-Saving outlets designed to turn off up to four connected devices when your TV or PC is shut down or goes into standby mode. The Energy-Saving Threshold Switch keeps the energy-saving feature active when the Master Outlet detects low power consumption. The P705G features 2100 Joules of protection and metal oxide varistor (MOV) technology, which guards the surge suppressor and connected electronics against line abnormalities and lightning surges. EMI/RFI filters block unwanted line noise from all connected electronics. Our Flame Resistant Technology uses an ABS housing that provides a high level of protection (UL 94 Recognized V-0 class material). A Limited Lifetime Warranty ensures that this surge suppressor has passed our highest quality standards in design, assembly, material and workmanship; further protection is offered by a $250,000 Connected Equipment Guarantee.
SEVEN NEMA 5-15R OUTLETS WITH SAFETY COVERS: Provide 2100 joules of surge protection for home and office computers, electronics, and home theater equipment; INPUT: NEMA 5-15P right angle plug with 5-foot power cord
ENERGY SAVING OUTLETS: Automatically turn off up to three connected devices when your computer (plugged into the master outlet) is shut down or goes into standby mode; THRESHOLD SWITCH: Ensures TV and PC compatibility
AUTOMATIC SHUTDOWN: Protects connected electronics with the integrated 15A circuit breaker which automatically switches off in the event of an overload that exceeds the model’s ability to suppress the signal
EMI/RFI FILTERS: Filters against electromagnetic interference and radio frequency interference ensuring clean power for connected equipment; KEYHOLE SLOTS: Allow the unit to be placed on a wall or under a desk to optimize space and cord management
LIMITED LIFETIME WARRANTY; $250,000 Connected Equipment Guarantee
Reviewer: Amazon Customer
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: TV controls other AV power
Review: My “home theater” setup uses multiple devices I aquired over time. While this works, it does mean that I either have to power on/off each device seperately or leave some of them on wasting electricity. To solve this problem I got this special power strip.All I did was plug the main TV into the “master” plug of this strip, and my other AV devices into the plugs that this strip turns on/off based upon the state of the “master”. Bingo, I now have a setup where my AV equipment all powers on whenever I use the TV’s remote to turn the TV on, and the AV equipment all loses power (turning off) whenever I tell the TV to power down. Now I no longer need to manually power on/off the AV equipment I have plugged into my TV!NOTE: The outlets on this power strip are so close to each other that you frequently don’t have enough room to use every outlet on this strip (I had to skip about 1/2 of them, due to the size of the plugs on my AV equipment). However, if (as in my case) this results in too few outlets for your AV equipment, just get some cheap multi-plugs to share a single strip outlet with multiple devices.NOTE: While I expect to normally only need my AV equipment when the TV is on, I suspect that won’t always be the case (for example, I may want to listen to music on the old stereo I have hooked up to the TV). As such I wanted some easy way to power the AV equipment when the TV is off. So I pluged a multi-plug into the “master” outlet of this power strip and plugged both the TV and a small lamp into that multi-plug. With this setup the AV equipment gets powered up either when I turn on my TV or when I turn on that specific lamp. So in the rare case when I want just the AV equipment (and not the TV), I just turn on that lamp and I’m good to go. But at all other times I just let the TV control the power for the AV equipment.
Reviewer: B.C. A.
Rating: 1.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Controller doesn’t work as promised
Review: Bad design. Randomly turns things off. I have this set up as my old one was. My receiver is the controller with TV and Roku, etc dependent on it. My Roku keeps turning off while I’m watching and the receiver remains on. Timing is irregular. 27 minutes, 54. No pattern. Useless.
Reviewer: Scott H. Price
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: I Don’t Understand…
Review: Why doesn’t the manufacturer recommend using the AVR (Audio Video Receiver) as the “master” device? It draws the most power when “on” in a home entertainment system and has a more consistent power draw than the TV (less likely to trigger a false switched outlets “off” situation.) They do recommend using the computer as the master in that scenario, and it’s more analogous to an AVR than a TV. AVR’s and PC’s are both at the heart of their systems and, if you think about it, what is a TV but a “monitor” with a tuner. Obviously, if you don’t have a separate audio system then the TV is the heart of your system and you don’t have this option, but if you do, the AVR is the better choice.I purchased this unit because when I replaced my AVR with a newer model, the new one draws more power in standby (4.5W) than then old one did. So, the old current switched power strip that turned the subwoofer amplifiers on and off with my AVR no longer worked as required because its trigger level couldn’t be set high enough to shut off the switched outlets when the new AVR is in standby. I needed a unit that would work with this higher standby power draw and this was one of the 2 units that looked promising.I replaced the old unit with this one, set it to the high “TV/PC” threshold and plugged the AVR into the master outlet (as it had been with the old unit.) The 2 subs are plugged into switched outlets as they also had been before (as are the cooling fans, which used to be plugged into the “switched” accessory outlet on the old AVR, but those AC outlets are long gone on new ones!) I removed another old power strip, as I realized that the remaining 2 devices connected to it could be plugged into the 2 “always on” outlets on this one, making it unnecessary.Now that everything was plugged in, I turned this units main power switch “on.” There was a “clack, clack” (relay? I assume; the switched outlets coming on briefly, then switching off to synchronize with the master.) When I turned on the AVR (and the rest of the system) the subwoofers powered up with it, as did the cooling fans. 8 hours later when I shut the system down the subs and fans shut down less than 0.5 second after the AVR (the old one took several seconds to do this with the old receiver, but it was about 25 years old. Perhaps it was time to swap it out, still working or not!)I do miss the LED that indicated whether the switched outlets were on or off, but the old one had a thumb wheel (rheostat) to manually set the threshold. The LED was needed more in that situation.All working exactly as it should and as expected; so far, so good!
Reviewer: zjbdragon
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Automagically powers on and off my sub
Review: I bought this energy-saving surge protector specifically to turn my subwoofer on and off with my home theater receiver. I recently had to replace the amplifier in my subwoofer with one that doesn’t have a standby feature. Plugging the sub amp into the “on/off with master” socket with the receiver in the “master” socket works exactly as expected. Sub amp only powers up when the receiver is on. Perfect. I used the “high” setting on the threshold switch.I know that you can get cheaper or more expensive alternatives to these Cyberpower strips. I’ve been trusting Cyberpower UPS devices to protect my computers for a decade, so getting their power strips was a no-brainer. A lot of the alternatives looked like the same rebranded white label products — untrustworthy.
Reviewer: SN
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Why I Bought ThisI wanted several of the devices to my computer to be completely off when the computer was sleeping or off. I plugged in my multiple monitors, computer speakers, etc. to the dependent outlets so that power would be cut off when they were not in use.The Good Parts* When the threshold is set to “High”, all the dependent outlets power off to save electricity* Has a couple of independent outlets that are always on* One of the independent outlets has extra horizontal space to accommodate a power brick* Long power cord* Mountable* Decent build qualityCould Be Better* There could be more space between the outlets, as most computer setups have more than one power brick to deal with and/or oversized plugs.* The “safety” sliders don’t lock in place, so I have doubts about how effective they are.
Reviewer: El Mau
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Como esta barra apaga todos los aparatos cuando el aparato principal se apaga (tele, compu) ahorra energía al no estar en standby y protege de descargas al no pasar corriente.
Reviewer: Jay
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Works exactly as expected. Used it to turn on my amp when my receiver is powered on. Got a 2nd on for my PC setup to power speakers when the PC is turned on. Works exactly as intended and the reaction time is almost immediate. When the PC is turned on my speakers turn on immediately.
Reviewer: Rick
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: I use this power bar to automatically control power to my sound bar and xbox1 when I turn on my TV.My 5 year old TV still draws enough power even when turned off to trigger the control outlet, so I switched the sensitivity switch to least sensitive and now the outlets turn on and off with the TV as they should. I see some reviews mention there is no sensitivity setting so perhaps there was an upgrade at some point, mine definitely has one.The outlets are a little close but have more space between than some power bars. I had no problem plugging in a couple of plugs with a bit of a flange side by side.Not sure I will see enough savings in electricity to pay for the added cost over a regular power bar but the auto switched power outlets is the main reason I got it.Works great.
Reviewer: Jon Ashby
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Does what it’s supposed to, but the colorful green and white sliding caps for the ports simply fall off when opened, they serve no purpose other than making the product seem cheap. This comes off as very shoddy build quality, the manufacturer should just eliminate these pointless covers. That said, the product itself does work as intended turning on my electronics when my computer boots, so I’ll hold onto it.






