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Max Demian Max Demian is offline
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Default Yawn, another meter question

On 19/08/2018 10:58, Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article ,
Broadback writes:
They are being advertised on TV as saving electricity. Now we all know
that adverts are all accurate and never lie. But how exactly do they
save electric? Or do they mean that customers can use the information
given to save it?


It means customers look at it and get a feel for what consumes the
most electricity in the house, and cut back.


Except it doesn't tell you which appliances are using the electricity,
or allow you to see what the average consumption of your fridge/freezer
is, or the total used for an operation such as a wash cycle or cooking
exercise.

Independant trials have shown this lasts for about a month before
the thrill wears off and the meter is ignored, and after that, the
savings drop back to nearly nothing.


I expect this would happen with most people even if they did give any
useful information.

Clip-on power meters have been available for many years which do
this (albeit less accurately), and their impact was identical, so
it comes as no surprise.


Or just look at the spinning disc (if you have an old meter).

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Max Demian