I appreciate that the 6 inch cale is UL listed. that is necessary, but not sufficient. I did not find the ampere rating. I need to know this current rating. The problem is that, in the past, these short cables were just used for "wall wart" power supplies. "Wall warts" do not draw much current. Home appliances typically have short power cords. Now, these new home appliances have even shorter cables. So, gradually, these short cables, will be used on higher power applicances. I obtained a new small toaster with a shorter power cord than my old toaster oven. The cord on this new toaster is 6 inches shorter. So, I needed this extension cord to reach the plug. The new toaster oven is 1100 watts, translating to about a 10 ampere current draw. I do not know if this extension cable has this capacity. I would appreciate an ampere rating for this cable. I do not know if I should be using it for my new toaster oven. Although the UL label is on the cable, no ampere listing is rating. I would suggest buyers of this cable be cautious using this cable for anything other than a "wall wart" power supply.