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Ultrasonic Pest Repeller Indoor 6 Pack Mouse Rodent Repellent Ultrasonic Plugin Mice Repellent for House, Spider Roach Deterrent Repeller Device Garage Attic IPQ3

  • Based on 2,348 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Thursday, Jul 31
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Features

  • [ Drive Pests Away Efficiently ] - Utilizing advanced ultrasonic technology, ChienMin ultrasonic pest repeller indoor irritates pests' brains and auditory nervous systems, effectively repelling a wide range of pests, including rodents and insects.
  • [ Comprehensive Indoor Coverage] - For optimal protection, install one pest repeller in each room. It provides full coverage against rats, bugs, cockroaches, spiders, ants, and more, ensuring your entire home remains pest-free.
  • [ Simple and Maintenance-Free Operation ] - Just plug the device into any power outlet. The blue night light indicates its active and working 24/10. No maintenance is required, making it an effortless pest control solution.
  • [ Wide Coverage Area ] - Each pest repeller covers up to 1603 square feet, making it ideal for various indoor spaces, including garages, kitchens, attics, barns, and RVs.
  • [ Quiet and Easy Pest Control ] - ChienMin ultrasonic pest control device offers a quiet and easy way to deter pests. Within 3-4 weeks, youll notice a significant decrease in pest activity, all without the need for harmful sprays or traps.

Brand: ChienMin


Color: White


Style: White


Package Dimensions: 6.42 x 4.84 x 2.72 inches


Item Weight: 8.8 ounces


Item model number: ChienMin Ultrasonic Pest Repeller


Date First Available: May 16, 2024


Manufacturer: ChienMin


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Thursday, Jul 31

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Works great
I have one in every room of my apartment. During the summer, the number of flies and mosquitoes inside is huge. I didn’t want anything with smells because I have dogs, and my apartment is not big, so it would bother them. These little things are really great because they keep the flies away.
Reviewed in the United States on June 18, 2024 by Aline Loures Aline Loures

  • I'm just mad about Mad Men
No cable in this not so recession proof household. We have our favorite shows that don't come via the four major networks and it's cheaper to buy the DVDs than pay a cable company $70 or so every month. "Mad Men" is one of about five of my "must have" titles. As a very low echelon advertising geek for many years, "Mad Men" gives me an insight into the lives of the hotshots in the ad game. Being very familiar with advertising in the sixties, but from a newspaper perspective, some elements run true. Dressing up was true, even for a worker bee like me. (I think the worker bees are guys; they slave for the queen bees--just a way of saying I am male.) I think ties were about one inch wide then and pretty drab. I wore a very wide bright blue and yellow striped number to work one day and was actually sent home to change. Same thing happened with a pale blue dress shirt. Shirt had to be crisp and white. The real pain with these cable shows (also, for example, "Dexter") is the gap between "seasons." It was so long a wait for me before the season three "Mad Men" DVD came out, I really felt out of touch with the plot line. Once I had my order in for season three, I pulled out the first two seasons and immersed myself in the eight disks, going through one or two disks each night (I am retired). Being of this era, and of its history, I totally lost myself in reliving that halcyon time of my life (it seems so because, after all, I was young). "Mad Men" proceeds at such a leisurely pace one becomes enveloped in not only the story but the lifestyle as well. The homes, the clothes, smoking and drinking without guilt ("major" guilt), the cars, the bars and, I suppose, the endless bed-hopping. I worked in newspaper advertising for the latter half of the sixties and with an agency from 1990 into the 21st century. "Mad Men" focuses on the behavior of what I believe were a minority of those in high (and not-so-high places). I'm referring, of course, to the massive amounts of fornication "Mad Men" implies was so absolutely routine. To be fair, the creator primarily suggests the most aggressive womanizing is by a very small number of top agency executives. To be fair, how many executives of any business report their crimes and misdemeanors to the workers? To be honest, there's always the water cooler. This is pretty much a generic review of the entire series because I did immerse myself in all three seasons over something like ten or so nights. The seasons of "Mad Men," like the seasons of the year, flow seamlessly together. I believe each season has ended with a cliffhanger of sorts but season three, without spoiling anything, felt challenging and, therefore possibly more upbeat than seasons one or two. Season three really does help establish the peripheral characters and their stories in the "Mad Men" saga. The first disk, again without revealing plots, left me tweeting about creator Matthew Weiner having completely lost his vision for the series. By the second disk, all was right with the world again--and wrong with Sterling, Cooper Advertising. Which is what we viewers expect, and want. Season three is a tumultuous ride because, of course, the agency has been acquired by an international advertising force. If advertising is a world where you have a job one day and are hunting for one the next, Sterling, Cooper's merger escalates this trauma both individually and within the overall scope of its little universe. I've given it five stars not merely because I grew to adulthood and finished a formal working life in this particular sphere of influence but because the drama is real, the characters are true and any viewer can relate and enter into the experience for about 45 minutes each week. Regrettably, for only about 13 weeks. And, for those of us who wait, we still have summer 2010 ahead with season four of "Mad Men" and we will twiddle our thumbs until the spring of 2011 when the season four DVD is finally released. We would have it no other way. One 45 minute episode, and leaving us hanging for a week -- I'll take my medicine one season, one big dose at a time. One lingering lament in this rather poor review (if you wanted story details): The first season "Mad Men" DVD package was unlike any I've ever seen. The set arrived in the form of a "flip open" silver grey Zippo lighter. After months of waiting for season two, I made a poor decision to get a little extra cash by selling off some of my too large DVD collection. Selling season one of "Mad Men" was a mortal sin. Tell Peggy's priest. I, of course, had to reorder it. It was like the first edition of a classic novel: one of a kind. The reissue of season one was as drab, as sad as anything I've seen. Season two was a decent suggestion of a shirt box. For season three, you knew there had been staff cuts. The signature Sterling, Cooper old-fashioned glass was pretty ordinary. That's advertising. Win some; lose some. Anybody who kept their original Zippo "cover" should hang onto it or expect a healthy return at eBay. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 23, 2010 by Wryter

  • Highly recommend
Style: White
We used to have problems with roaches. Not anymore. Highly recommend it.
Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2024 by Daniel Ferreira

  • It works wonders
Style: White
This is perfect to keep roaches away. I did see a few in the first couple of days but they eventually disappeared.
Reviewed in the United States on June 22, 2024 by JULIANA ELISA PEREIRA

  • Awesome
The media could not be loaded. Great bang for the buck! Get 6 of them so can be used to cover whole house. Love the lights on them kinda doubles as a little night light! Light pulses slowly bright to dim but hasn’t been a bother at night and is actually kinda soothing. Plugs right in and gets to work. Some I’ve tried give off a noise I can here. This one does not. Very small and compact. Lovely look. Since they small they can be put anywhere! Got some heavy rain coming in the next week here in Texas and then huge water roaches come out in herds. So getting them up now hoping I don’t see as many. But haven’t seen many bugs already since out them out around the house!! So so far win win. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2024 by Bethany Bethany

  • Easy to Use and Effective
Just plug it in and let it do its job - no maintenance required. The pests are staying away and I couldn't be happier with the results.
Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2024 by Tyler King

  • The more things change
The third season of MAD MEN, the extraordinarily well written and carefully researched historical AMC television drama, comes across much better on DVD than it did when it was originally airing episodically. The DVD set (again arranged in a different package format from previous seasons) allows us to get a stronger sense of the sweep of changes the show's creator, Matt Weiner, and his associates depict in the world of Sterling-Cooper, their fictional 1960s advertising agency. The season begins with a joke on "the British invasion": Sterling-Cooper has been acquired by Powell, Putnam and Lowe, a giant London-based international agency, which has placed a major new character, the sardonic Lane Pryce (the marvelous Jared Harris) as the New York firm's new financial officer. Don and Betty Draper, the series' major characters, have reaffirmed their commitment to one another through Betty's pregnancy with a third child, and in the first episode Betty's gruff father Gene Hofstadt (Ryan Cutrona, equally excellent) has had a stroke and must come to live with his daughter's family in Ossining. The genius of the series is its richness of detail both in period flavor and in the depth of the characters: much is left unsaid that speaks volumes about the players and the times, and its great to have an American series that doesn't tell us everything outright that's going on. It also allows for lovely moments of great beauty: a children's maypole dance, a drug-induced dream about a caterpillar, a nighttime view of the Sterling-Cooper bullpen late at night empty and abandoned. The season documents tremendous changes in American society in the crucial year of 1963: the ongoing Civil Rights movement, the change in attitudes towards gender and sexuality, and inevitably the assassination of JFK (which is handled with originality). The most difficult thing about the new season is that the characters of Don and Betty seem to be caught in a revolving door with their old problems and squabbles: Don is dishonest and cheats on Betty constantly, and Betty will not be happy with what her husband provides for her (which he thought was all that was expected of him). Yet the repetition of their tensions was almost inherent in the show's very structure, leading to this season finale's refreshing possibilities for new beginnings for both characters, which will be essential given that while they are both highly attractive and accomplished people neither of them are especially compelling now their depths (or rather their shallownesses) have been thoroughly plumbed. (Even so, Jon Hamm continues to give an especially intelligent performance as Don, showing us he's a much more complex person than the character himself is.) Much more intriguing are the series' other characters, including the Drapers' lisping daughter Sally (Kiernan Shipka), on whom nothing is lost; their tight-lipped housekeeper Carla (Deborah Lacy, in a remarkably subtle ongoing performance), who also sees everything the Drapers are up to; and Don's ambitious young associate Pete Campbell and his intelligent wife Trudy (respectively, Vincent Kartheiser and Allison Brie). The production values, as usual, are astonishing, and the use of music by David Carbonara is one of the series's greatest strengths. The DVD set comes with features such as documentaries on the March on Washington and the murder of Medgar Evers (both of which are key events in the season's timeline), and multiple episode commentaries, including many by Weiner, who is more intelligent and articulate (though no less chronically self-congratulatory) than many other cable series creators. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2010 by Jay Dickson

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