KMC Smart Tap 2-Pack, 4-Outlet Smart Plug WiFi Outlet Wall Tap, Energy Monitoring, Works with Alexa and Google Home, Remote Control Your Devices from Anywhere, No Hub Required, ETL Certified, White
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wrxsho
> 3 dayTried to attach the both devices to existing wifi and smart life app. Added another brands plugs within 5 minutes while over 30 minutes of trying did not work. Ive setup 80 iot devices, so the procedure is not new. New out of box but it wont connect. The receptacles are pretty tight though, which is nice. Unfortunately will have to return.
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Kayleigh Stroman MD
> 3 dayThese arrived quick and were easy to set up. It said you had to get their specific app, however I already had an app that went with a power strip I bought a few months ago. I took a chance and it loaded on it. Nice to keep all my devices on one app instead of every make/model having a different app to use. Works with Alexa pretty well. All in all I’m super pleased with this purchase! Might add a few more later on.
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M Malkani
> 3 dayI bought it to monitor power consumption independently on each outlet but it only shows total consumption combined. i also have other smart plugs they show lot more easier graph then this.. if they improve it, it would make it lot nicer & useful device.
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Jay
Greater than one weekGreat bang for your buck! Works great once you figure out how to set it up. Use the Smart Life + app on the iPhone and follow the directions to the T or it will not work!
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John Grantman
> 3 dayI mistakenly purchased 8 of these smart taps in total. The first 2 installed OK... little finicky compared to any other Tuya Smart compatible products but not the worst setup I have gone through. Everything seemed to work OK with Tuya app and with SmartLife app on both Android and iOS. Additionally the taps were useable in Home Assistant and provided individual control over 3 of 4 outlets and power monitoring detail. Since they were cheap and worked I ended up ordering 6 more over course of several days. These 8 total were added to 37 other smart devices which included 8 other different types of power monitor plugs I have accumulated over past several years. Maybe I am being too critical but with so many different devices and the easily 40 other returned devices that either didnt work or had fatal flaws I have an insane amount of data to compare against and have ended up with a pretty good testing regimen. I am sure I spend too much time messing with smart home stuff but lets just chalk it up to a hobby (or a developing addiction?) :) Here is what I ended up realizing after I put the taps in use: They do not stay connected. Not when connected to network with 50+ other devices that are stable. Not when connected individually to network with all other devices powered off and less than 5 feet from the WiFi Router. Not when moved around to different locations in the house. Best experience has been actually connected to WiFi Extender (in AP mode) rather than directly to router. The energy monitoring data is so far off it might be closer to random than terribly calibrated. The amount off is not consistent making it impossible to just offset or compensate with a standard factor. Two of the taps (1 each from different purchases) would routinely show 0.7 V and then never reset. (Both returned as defective). The other 6 all show over 130V... which I wish was true since I actually have issues with ComEd (Illinois) being able to supply 120V consistently. I have measured the same few outlets on different breakers in different areas of house to confirm. Using a kil-a-watt device and 4 different power monitor plugs from 4 different companies (using different internals)... there is less than 1V variance across the 4 other plugs and the kil-a-watt -- all showing between 116-119.5 V over long periods of time. Each of the 6 taps I have not yet returned show 127-133V. The values seem stable until a device is reset and then used again... first time might hover around 127... then after rest 131... 2nd reset... 133. Having the V read high in turn causes the power to be calculated high... somewhat defeating the purpose of collecting energy monitoring data from the tap. The taps shut off randomly... often if there is a network reset (reboot router, power outage, internet outage... etc). There is not setting to retain relay status or force on as default mode. Even a dip that does not trigger a UPS or flicker other smart plugs/taps will power off these taps. The always on outlet power use is not part of the power monitoring. If you use the 3 managed outlets you can get inaccurate power data and you have to manually button switch the device on periodically due to the random shutoffs. If you use the always on outlet no power data is measured and at that point you are just doing exact same thing as not using the tap and using the wall outlet. There is no over current protection or it exists well above what can be hit from a standard residential outlet. I have 1 outlet I know I can trip on demand with a toaster and an electric kettle. The toaster starts at 800W and levels to 750W and the kettle starts within few seconds at 1700W and settles to 1550-1600W. One in each plug is an almost immediate 2500W pull which will trip the breaker in a few minutes. Any other smart plug or tap I use will auto-shutoff before both can get to full power... except when plugged into this tap where it runs for a min then breaker trips. In fact the kettle alone shuts off most other smart taps/plugs except on marketed as heavy duty. All have same 1875W max most smart devices in US have in their specs. Last point is kinda funny as the tap wont shut off to save you but if you use it with a reasonable load (1 LED bulb lamp or a USB phone/tablet charger)... it will shut off intermittently for no reason. I will probably return these though I might also attempt to reflash the firmware and see if this is an actual hardware issue or a software/firmware issue with this company (KMC). I fully expected buying sketchy smart home devices would come with issues... but for the most part it has been easy to figure out immediately something works or not. Things that work have worked as expected until these taps. If you are afflicted with same problems I have and waste an inappropriate amount of time on smart home hacking/tinkering the price of these taps and the challenge of working around a poorly manufactured or poorly coded device might be a use case. If you want an inexpensive smart home device supported by Tuya or SmartLife app which in turn integrates with Google Home, Alexa and even Homekit (if you use Home Assistant server)... there are at least 2 other taps and 10-15 other similarly inexpensive 1 or 2 outlet plugs that wont disappoint. I am not going to tell anyone not to buy something but I did want to provide something more than the typical this sucks review for those who want to know why something is rated low by someone.
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Chari c.
> 3 dayGreat product great price
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Jack Giang
> 3 dayIts easy to connect to the wifi and the app is simple to use. It has energy usage but its not by individual plug its for the entire 4 outlets. It would be better if it could connect to smartthings but for now I have to use a separate app to turn it on and off. You can also set a schedule per outlet. The bottom outlet is always on so you have 3 controllable outlets and 1 that is always on.
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Richie V.
> 3 dayI purchase about 12 of these. They made tasks so easy. I used it with my google phone. I like that I can turn on 1 or multiple outlets at the same time. I can ask to see how much power is being used. You can set it to turn the lights on or heater before you need to get up. You can have the lights turned off in case you forget.
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kristina vrooman
Greater than one weekDid not connect to Alexa right away... It only allowed me to use the application to turn the plug on or off. Once connected with the Alexa it worked great!
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Jamster
Greater than one weekEasy to set up and works great