But if you don’t know, then either don’t buy this or call an electrician.I haven’t cooked on it yet so this review is only about setup. I’ll try to remember to update it when I’ve cooked on it.Every person who is complaining about no plug must not have read the product description nor the Q&A. Every person blowing breakers or setting stuff on fire doesn’t understand electricity and is trying to do something stupid and dangerous.This unit does not come with a plug because it’s not a standard, underpowered, consumer-grade griddle that you can plug into a household outlet. No, it does not matter that the description says 110v and you know your outlets are 110v. You see, this is where understanding electricity comes in. See there in the description where it says 3,000 watts? Yeah this puppy draws a lot of juice, and no, plugging it into a 220v outlet is NOT the answer. It says right on the tin it is a 110v appliance! So how much juice? Well 3,000 watts / 110 volts = 27.3 amps. If you plug this into a household outlet, which is 15 amps, or possibly 20, then you are going to have problems, up to and including needing to build a new house upon the smoking ruins of your old house.So why would you buy this? Well, because 15amp griddles SUCK. They don’t get hot enough. You want an electric griddle that cooks like gas? This is what you need. However you need to be able to power it. You’ll need an electrician to put in a 30-amp circuit if you don’t have one.Many people will have this wired directly to a power source with no plug. Me? I’m using mine for camping. My coach doesn’t use propane, and electric campsites typically have a spare 30amp outlet available since my coach uses the 50amp outlet. So I bought a standard RV 30amp plug and connected it to this griddle. Easy peasy. Pictures for reference. This, along with a 75-ft 30amp extension cord, means I never need to worry about propane for my camp griddle again.PLEASE, if you don’t understand amps, watts, volts, hot, neut