how accurate are "energyguide" numbers vs. Kill-A-Watt?
On Mar 27, 11:18*am, Phisherman wrote:
On Thu, 26 Mar 2009 19:33:06 -0400, Nate Nagel
wrote:
subject says all...
in an effort to see how much a new fridge would really be worth in terms
of energy savings I got a Kill-A-Watt (found one online under $30)
hooked it up to fridge. *In 24 hours of use it's apparently used almost
2.5 kWh - that's over 900 kWh/year!
I see most of the fridges that I'm considering are rated at about 500
kWh/year give or take.
do both of these numbers seem reasonable? *A new 25 ft^3 "energy star"
fridge would use a little more than half as much juice as my 20 year old
18 ft^3 clunker?
If this is true, I won't feel nearly so badly about spending the $$$...
nate
For the most part I trust the accuracy of a kill-o-watt meter. *I
trust government claims (or anything else for that matter) much less
than years ago. * Check the refrigerator wall thicknesses when you
compare. *Refrigerators use a lot of energy.-
$90 a year for a 24 cft side by side, with ice maker/water in the door
is a lot of energy?
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