View Single Post
  #3   Report Post  
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
Jim Wilkins Jim Wilkins is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,146
Default Computer power consumption

On Feb 15, 11:57*pm, "Michael Koblic" wrote:
...Kill-A-Watt ...
My most recent purchase (Compaq Presario) does this:

Turned off 2.1W
Booting 60W
On but quiet 46W
Asleep 5.8W
Hibernating 1.7W

My old computer also draws about 3W while supposedly switched off.

So the questions a .......
--
Michael Koblic,
Campbell River, BC


In a discussion on alt.energy.homepower someone (Neon John?) wrote
that they had tested a Kill-A-Watt against lab equipment and found it
quite accurate, but like any digital instrument you can't trust that
the accuracy is as good as the resolution. If the 0.01 Amp display
resolution matches that of the A/D converter (doubtful) then the
wattage at 120V would change in steps of 1.2W and the real accuracy is
no better than +/- one step.

1) Why is the computer drawing any power at all when turned off?

The circuit that commands the computer to power up when you press the
momentary-contact power button has to draw some power itself. I
believe they were designed for lowest cost rather than efficiency. The
service manual for my Dell Dimension says to press the power button -
after- unplugging the AC cord to discharge a large capacitor, before
swapping parts.

2) Why is the power drawn less when hibernating then when switched off?

See above. Your 2.1W and 1.7W readings don't really mean that much
unless you have checked the calibration of that KAW somehow, like with
a resistor load. Which I don't suggest. Even if you do the cheap
methods of converting 120 - 240VAC to a small amount of low voltage DC
can have high power factors.

3) What happens to a computer which is turned off and the plug is pulled?

The front-panel button won't turn it on until you restore AC power.

I have a main power strip on the side of this table that cuts off
everything, slays the energy vampires. (OK, I'm a fan of Joss Whedon's
work). The UPS and laptop charger are plugged into it, and sometimes a
soldering iron and small heat gun. The two desktops are on separate
strips plugged into the UPS. To use one I turn on the main strip, then
the UPS and let it self-test, then the strip for that computer. Their
monitors, USB drives, speakers, printers and keyboard lamp more than
double the power demand.

4) What happens with laptops? Do they draw power from their battery
continuously even when turned off?

This Latitude doesn't, the batteries stay at 100% when it's shut down
or in hibernation. Standby does use some battery power.
I recently had to replace the 2032 CMOS batteries in my 10-year-old
Compaq laptops. Their main batteries are dead so I run them off AC and
they wake up from hibernation with no battery installed, usually the
instant I plug in the charger. Ergo they must not need battery power
in hibernation. The only symptom of the dead CMOS battery was the 1980
date.

jsw