Mr Flibble
Jun 22nd, 2009, 12:17 PM
Does anyone monitor/data log their home's power consumption?
You can get devices for about £20 to do it that clip onto the main feed to fuse box then have a wireless display. I bought a slightly prettier version second hand for about £60 a month or two back:
HUlaV20keB0
It's useful for checking whether you've left something on - ours glows red in the living room if the oven/kettle/dishwasher/washing machine/microwave/hair drier etc is running.
Things I've found so far:
Cooking in the microwave (850W) uses far, far less power than our A rated oven.
When everything is turned off we still use 200-300W. I know that our home automation system uses about 50W, but there's somewhere other things using a lot more. The fridge is the only thing I can think of, but haven't done a proper test yet. The tv/home cinema gear uses a total of 4W in standby, as it's on X10.
The dishwasher and washing machine (both A rated) cost about 40-50p in electricity for one cycle. Running them at night (we're on Economy7) would save about 30p.
Things I thought were using more power than they should arent, such as cordless phone chargers.
Haven't gotten as far as using it to plot graphs of carbon usage yet.
You can get devices for about £20 to do it that clip onto the main feed to fuse box then have a wireless display. I bought a slightly prettier version second hand for about £60 a month or two back:
HUlaV20keB0
It's useful for checking whether you've left something on - ours glows red in the living room if the oven/kettle/dishwasher/washing machine/microwave/hair drier etc is running.
Things I've found so far:
Cooking in the microwave (850W) uses far, far less power than our A rated oven.
When everything is turned off we still use 200-300W. I know that our home automation system uses about 50W, but there's somewhere other things using a lot more. The fridge is the only thing I can think of, but haven't done a proper test yet. The tv/home cinema gear uses a total of 4W in standby, as it's on X10.
The dishwasher and washing machine (both A rated) cost about 40-50p in electricity for one cycle. Running them at night (we're on Economy7) would save about 30p.
Things I thought were using more power than they should arent, such as cordless phone chargers.
Haven't gotten as far as using it to plot graphs of carbon usage yet.