We have used that one and it does what it claims.
Just one small gripe. It is easy to "bleed" with RF in the room.
Running it from a DC wall wart may cause trouble unless the radio you're measuring is hooked to a shielded dummy load. The power wire becomes a receiving antenna, feeding RF picked up in the room straight into the peak-reading adapter. Generally makes the peak reading "twitchy". If laying your hand on top of the wattmeter changes the reading, this is a hint that the adapter is being "bled" by loose RF in the room.
Running it from a battery is a pain in the neck. If you forget to flip the switch back to "average", you'll run down a 9-Volt battery before too long. But this keeps the power leads short, with the battery inside the meter. Reduces the "bleeding" problem a lot.
Just leaving the cover off of some amplifiers allowed enough RF energy to "escape" into the room that this adapter would peg the meter when the switch was in the "peak" position. Still worked fine on average, though.
Putting the cover back on the amplifier fixed the problem. Likewise, using it on an antenna that causes "RF on the coax" feeding back into the room can do this as well.
Aside from those limitations, I like that one. It just works.
73