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#1
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Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the
wiring in the house. Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. Are the digital meters more accurate? Is there a way I can test the meter? |
#2
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On Jan 28, 9:18*am, Limp Arbor wrote:
Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the wiring in the house. *Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. *The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. *Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. *Are the digital meters more accurate? *Is there a way I can test the meter? I'm not sure about putting stuff inside conduit code wise so I'd opt for simple. Wad up a bit of fiberglass insulation and stuff it in the end. When did you change over? How much of your heat system uses electricity? All the meters should be pretty accurate. Does your new meter allow the pwoer company to read it remotely? Did you look closely at the bills to see if any of them are "estimated" rather than based on actual readings? Few power companies read the meter every single month. |
#3
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On Jan 28, 9:30*am, jamesgangnc wrote:
On Jan 28, 9:18*am, Limp Arbor wrote: Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the wiring in the house. *Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. *The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. *Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. *Are the digital meters more accurate? *Is there a way I can test the meter? I'm not sure about putting stuff inside conduit code wise so I'd opt for simple. * Wad up a bit of fiberglass insulation and stuff it in the end. When did you change over? *How much of your heat system uses electricity? *All the meters should be pretty accurate. *Does your new meter allow the pwoer company to read it remotely? *Did you look closely at the bills to see if any of them are "estimated" rather than based on actual readings? *Few power companies read the meter every single month. All my readings are actual. Forced hot air so only the blower and the ignitor are using electric. My jump in usage occured when I first made the change back in April so the cold weather probably isn't it. I'm thinking my new meter is either bad or more accurate than the old one. |
#4
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On Jan 28, 9:18*am, Limp Arbor wrote:
Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the wiring in the house. *Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. *The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. *Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. *Are the digital meters more accurate? *Is there a way I can test the meter? What type conduit did you use on your panel feeder run ? EMT ? RMC ? I am not aware of any air tight fittings for EMT, however RMC has several different types of explosion proof fittings and junction boxes which are used with threaded RMC conduit... These are the same type of fittings you see all lined up in a row on the side wall of a gas station to feed power and comm to the pump islands... Such fittings are used with an approved packing fiber and sealing compound to create a barrier to prevent gases, vapors or flames from using the conduit to migrate in an electrical system... As to your increase in the electric bill: What did you upgrade to 200amps from ? You replaced some lighting, namely one 100w lamp with six 75w lamps... You realize that the six lamps use 4.5 times as much wattage as the single 100w lamp did... You are comparing 100w per hour x 16 hours which is 1,600w or 1.6 kWh to (6) x 75w = 450w x 16 hours which is 7,200w or 7.2 kWh Without knowing more about your electrical usage history and how many kWh your home uses besides the one change you described which happened at the same time as your 200amp service upgrade a definitive answer can not be given, but it sounds like the increase can be reasonably explained by the lighting changes you have made rather than a faulty electrical meter or an "estimated" bill because your meter is only actually read periodically as someone else proposed... ~~ Evan ~~ Evan |
#5
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"Limp Arbor" wrote in message
Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the wiring in the house. Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. Are the digital meters more accurate? Is there a way I can test the meter? I've heard of another person who had their electric bill go up after switching to digital. It could be the old meter was reading wrong or the new is reading wrong. Call the electric company and explain the problem. Also if you properly upgraded your ground system with the installation of the new panel, it is also possible that an electrical gizmo is *now* leaking to ground. Whereas *before* there was no path to "ground". Now there might be something which is now grounded which was not grounded before (the way things should be). For example electric motors in HVAC, refrigerators, sump pumps, etc. can get dirt and crud in them. Then there would be a small "short to ground". And this small short to ground would be to the third prong on the plug. And it would always use a little electricity, not enough to trip a breaker. And before there might not have been a grounded third prong. Now there is a grounded third prong and the problem has surfaced. This could be quite difficult to track down these days since just about every appliance / gizmo now has electronic controls and always uses a little electricity. So you could turn everything in the house off, but there would still be a normal small use of electricity for all the electronics. I suppose you could turn everything in the house "off". Then watch the electric use on the meter. Then turn off one breaker at a time and see if any one breaker substantially slows the meter when turned off. And before doing that, calculate what amount of meter use a 15% increase would cause. Then with all appliances / gizmos off, see if in fact the meter is using 15% electricity at all times. If not, then that might not be the problem. Also perhaps an electrician would have test equipment to measure leakage to ground. Maybe an amp meter placed on the ground wires would detect current flow which should not be there? Things which might now be grounded which were not in the past might be metal water pipes and anything metal they are touching, metal A/C duct work, metal cases of appliances, and anything metal the 3rd prong of plugs would connect to like metal cases. Note GFCI breakers/outlets detect leakage to ground and trip. And I suppose it is possible a staple could be in a wire somewhere causing a small leakage to ground. Or a wire pulled tight against a sharp metal object which is cutting into the wire. And not a good short to ground which would trip the breaker, rather just enough to run up the electric bill! The key is where the ground wires connect to the electric panel and current flows through these to the panel. DO NOT DISCONNECT THESE to measure current flow as there could be a possibility of electrocution! A ground wire could be "hot"! |
#6
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In article ,
"Bill" wrote: I've heard of another person who had their electric bill go up after switching to digital. we've had this topic a few times on a.h.r., and apparently it's not uncommon for the new meters to be flat out wrong. |
#7
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Limp Arbor wrote:
Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the wiring in the house. Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? This is actually required by the NEC (300.7-A). Mix of warm and cold air can condense the moisture out of the warm air producing water. The common building entry is for conduit down from the meter can to an LB fitting and conduit out the back into the building. Common practice is to pack "Duct seal" (a UL listed a commercial product) around the wires inside the LB where they go into the conduit into the building. Also common practice around here to hacksaw a small slot in the bottom of the LB to drain water if any accumulates. Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. Are the digital meters more accurate? Is there a way I can test the meter? The digital and mechanical meters should both be very accurate. You can shut everything off except for a known wattage and read the meter before and after a timed interval. A 1,000 W load for 1 hour will register 1 KWH. For real accuracy you would probably have to check the "known" load with something like a "Kill A Watt" meter http://www.p3international.com/produ.../P4400-CE.html -- bud-- |
#8
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On Jan 28, 10:41*am, Evan wrote:
On Jan 28, 9:18*am, Limp Arbor wrote: Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the wiring in the house. *Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. *The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. *Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. *Are the digital meters more accurate? *Is there a way I can test the meter? What type conduit did you use on your panel feeder run ? EMT ? *RMC ? I am not aware of any air tight fittings for EMT, however RMC has several different types of explosion proof fittings and junction boxes which are used with threaded RMC conduit... *These are the same type of fittings you see all lined up in a row on the side wall of a gas station to feed power and comm to the pump islands... *Such fittings are used with an approved packing fiber and sealing compound to create a barrier to prevent gases, vapors or flames from using the conduit to migrate in an electrical system... As to your increase in the electric bill: *What did you upgrade to 200amps from ? You replaced some lighting, namely one 100w lamp with six 75w lamps... *You realize that the six lamps use 4.5 times as much wattage as the single 100w lamp did... You are comparing 100w per hour x 16 hours which is 1,600w or 1.6 kWh *to (6) x 75w = 450w x 16 hours which is 7,200w or 7.2 kWh Without knowing more about your electrical usage history and how many kWh your home uses besides the one change you described which happened at the same time as your 200amp service upgrade a definitive answer can not be given, but it sounds like the increase can be reasonably explained by the lighting changes you have made rather than a faulty electrical meter or an "estimated" bill because your meter is only actually read periodically as someone else proposed... ~~ Evan ~~ Evan So if I have the math right: 7.2 - 1.6 = 5.6 additional KWH per day 5.6 x 30 = 168 KWH per month 168 x 0.1227 = $20.61 per month Wow! |
#9
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On Jan 28, 11:10*am, Limp Arbor wrote:
On Jan 28, 10:41*am, Evan wrote: On Jan 28, 9:18*am, Limp Arbor wrote: Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the wiring in the house. *Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. *The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. *Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. *Are the digital meters more accurate? *Is there a way I can test the meter? What type conduit did you use on your panel feeder run ? EMT ? *RMC ? I am not aware of any air tight fittings for EMT, however RMC has several different types of explosion proof fittings and junction boxes which are used with threaded RMC conduit... *These are the same type of fittings you see all lined up in a row on the side wall of a gas station to feed power and comm to the pump islands... *Such fittings are used with an approved packing fiber and sealing compound to create a barrier to prevent gases, vapors or flames from using the conduit to migrate in an electrical system... As to your increase in the electric bill: *What did you upgrade to 200amps from ? You replaced some lighting, namely one 100w lamp with six 75w lamps... *You realize that the six lamps use 4.5 times as much wattage as the single 100w lamp did... You are comparing 100w per hour x 16 hours which is 1,600w or 1.6 kWh *to (6) x 75w = 450w x 16 hours which is 7,200w or 7.2 kWh Without knowing more about your electrical usage history and how many kWh your home uses besides the one change you described which happened at the same time as your 200amp service upgrade a definitive answer can not be given, but it sounds like the increase can be reasonably explained by the lighting changes you have made rather than a faulty electrical meter or an "estimated" bill because your meter is only actually read periodically as someone else proposed... ~~ Evan ~~ Evan So if I have the math right: 7.2 - 1.6 = 5.6 additional KWH per day 5.6 x 30 = 168 KWH per month 168 x 0.1227 = $20.61 per month Wow! Just get your own meter and load and test. I would like to test mine cause I think I need to pay more !!!!! Also got a new digital water meter. greg |
#10
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On Jan 28, 10:52*am, "Bill" wrote:
"Limp Arbor" *wrote in message Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the wiring in the house. *Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. *The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. *Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. *Are the digital meters more accurate? Is there a way I can test the meter? I've heard of another person who had their electric bill go up after switching to digital. It could be the old meter was reading wrong or the new is reading wrong. Call the electric company and explain the problem. Also if you properly upgraded your ground system with the installation of the new panel, it is also possible that an electrical gizmo is *now* leaking to ground. Whereas *before* there was no path to "ground". Now there might be something which is now grounded which was not grounded before (the way things should be). For example electric motors in HVAC, refrigerators, sump pumps, etc. can get dirt and crud in them. Then there would be a small "short to ground". And this small short to ground would be to the third prong on the plug. And it would always use a little electricity, not enough to trip a breaker. And before there might not have been a grounded third prong. Now there is a grounded third prong and the problem has surfaced. This could be quite difficult to track down these days since just about every appliance / gizmo now has electronic controls and always uses a little electricity. So you could turn everything in the house off, but there would still be a normal small use of electricity for all the electronics. I suppose you could turn everything in the house "off". Then watch the electric use on the meter. Then turn off one breaker at a time and see if any one breaker substantially slows the meter when turned off. And before doing that, calculate what amount of meter use a 15% increase would cause. Then with all appliances / gizmos off, see if in fact the meter is using 15% electricity at all times. If not, then that might not be the problem. Also perhaps an electrician would have test equipment to measure leakage to ground. Maybe an amp meter placed on the ground wires would detect current flow which should not be there? Things which might now be grounded which were not in the past might be metal water pipes and anything metal they are touching, metal A/C duct work, metal cases of appliances, and anything metal the 3rd prong of plugs would connect to like metal cases. Note GFCI breakers/outlets detect leakage to ground and trip. And I suppose it is possible a staple could be in a wire somewhere causing a small leakage to ground. Or a wire pulled tight against a sharp metal object which is cutting into the wire. And not a good short to ground which would trip the breaker, rather just enough to run up the electric bill! The key is where the ground wires connect to the electric panel and current flows through these to the panel. DO NOT DISCONNECT THESE to measure current flow as there could be a possibility of electrocution! A ground wire could be "hot"!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - If Evans calculations and my followups are correct just putting in the ceiling lights and ditching the table lamp could explain most if not all of the difference. I'm still going to to amp each wire this weekend and see if I do have a short or something that is going to ground. My electric before was grounded so I doubt it is a newly ground appliance but it could be I nicked a wire or ran a staple through something. I was actually expecting the bill to go down since I got rid of all the Al/Cu-clad wire and replaced it all with copper. I found a few wires with burnt insulation and corroded wires so I thought the resisatance of the new all copper would be less saving me hundreds per month. :-) |
#11
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On Jan 28, 11:03*am, bud-- wrote:
Limp Arbor wrote: Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the wiring in the house. *Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? This is actually required by the NEC (300.7-A). Mix of warm and cold air can condense the moisture out of the warm air producing water. The common building entry is for conduit down from the meter can to an LB fitting and conduit out the back into the building. Common practice is to pack "Duct seal" (a UL listed a commercial product) around the wires inside the LB where they go into the conduit into the building. Also common practice around here to hacksaw a small slot in the bottom of the LB to drain water if any accumulates. Packing the pipe coming out of the LB into the house will be easier than trying to plug the conduit where it comes into the panel. When I had the panel inspected he didn't look at the LB or ask me to pull the cover. I thought about drilling a small hole in the bottom of the LB as a precaution but didn't do it (maybe I will). The cover on those is surprisingly flimsy and the gasket wasn't very thick. Seems like the outdoor outlet boxes would seal better than the LBs. Thanks. I'm getting the branch wire replacements inspected Monday so I'll ask the inspector about the LB then. Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. *The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. *Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. *Are the digital meters more accurate? *Is there a way I can test the meter? The digital and mechanical meters should both be very accurate. You can shut everything off except for a known wattage and read the meter before and after a timed interval. A 1,000 W load for 1 hour will register 1 KWH. For real accuracy you would probably have to check the "known" load with something like a "Kill A Watt" meterhttp://www.p3international.com/products/special/P4400/P4400-CE.html -- bud-- |
#12
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SNIP
Also perhaps an electrician would have test equipment to measure leakage to ground. Maybe an amp meter placed on the ground wires would detect current flow which should not be there? If Evans calculations and my followups are correct just putting in the ceiling lights and ditching the table lamp could explain most if not all of the difference. I'm still going to to amp each wire this weekend and see if I do have a short or something that is going to ground. My electric before was grounded so I doubt it is a newly ground appliance but it could be I nicked a wire or ran a staple through something. I was actually expecting the bill to go down since I got rid of all the Al/Cu-clad wire and replaced it all with copper. I found a few wires with burnt insulation and corroded wires so I thought the resisatance of the new all copper would be less saving me hundreds per month. :-) Go back to your 100 watt bulb for a month and note the difference. The math looks pretty good; sometimes what's going on is not that intuitive. MLD |
#13
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On 1/28/2011 8:18 AM, Limp Arbor wrote:
Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the wiring in the house. Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. Are the digital meters more accurate? Is there a way I can test the meter? I've heard dozens of times never change out an old mechanical meter. They are almost always sluggish and slow. You found this out. -- Steve Barker remove the "not" from my address to email |
#14
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On Jan 28, 12:55*pm, Steve Barker wrote:
On 1/28/2011 8:18 AM, Limp Arbor wrote: Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the wiring in the house. *Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. *The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. *Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. *Are the digital meters more accurate? *Is there a way I can test the meter? I've heard dozens of times never change out an old mechanical meter. They are almost always sluggish and slow. *You found this out. -- Steve Barker remove the "not" from my address to email Wasn't my choice. I had to change the meter socket to one that was rated for 200A when I changed the panel. The new meter socket was only 1" taller. When the electric company got the OK from the inspector to turn me back on they stuck in the digital meter. |
#15
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Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the
wiring in the house. Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? This is actually required by the NEC (300.7-A). Mix of warm and cold air can condense the moisture out of the warm air producing water. The common building entry is for conduit down from the meter can to an LB fitting and conduit out the back into the building. Common practice is to pack "Duct seal" (a UL listed a commercial product) around the wires inside the LB where they go into the conduit into the building. Also common practice around here to hacksaw a small slot in the bottom of the LB to drain water if any accumulates. Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. Are the digital meters more accurate? Is there a way I can test the meter? The digital and mechanical meters should both be very accurate. You can shut everything off except for a known wattage and read the meter before and after a timed interval. A 1,000 W load for 1 hour will register 1 KWH. For real accuracy you would probably have to check the "known" load with something like a "Kill A Watt" meter http://www.p3international.com/produ.../P4400-CE.html *Bud is correct about the Duct Seal. I think it the best way to go because it can be removed years later if needed. I've drilled holes in weatherproof boxes to let water drain out, but eventually they become clogged with crud and water accumulates anyway. If you're so inclined you can open the LB every year and clean out any condensation. Have an extra gasket standing by. You can also pack some Duct Seal inside of the weatherhead to prevent rain from getting in. I also caulk around the fittings and the hub. If you think that there is a problem with the new meter, you should ask the power company for a replacement. However you did increase your load by 350 watts which is on 16 hours a day. Do you have a day rate and a night rate with the new meter? I have Time of Day Service for my electric and consequently have a higher rate during the day than at night and on weekends. |
#16
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On Jan 28, 1:16*pm, Limp Arbor wrote:
On Jan 28, 12:55*pm, Steve Barker wrote: On 1/28/2011 8:18 AM, Limp Arbor wrote: Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the wiring in the house. *Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. *The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. *Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. *Are the digital meters more accurate? *Is there a way I can test the meter? I've heard dozens of times never change out an old mechanical meter. They are almost always sluggish and slow. *You found this out. -- Steve Barker remove the "not" from my address to email Wasn't my choice. *I had to change the meter socket to one that was rated for 200A when I changed the panel. *The new meter socket was only 1" taller. When the electric company got the OK from the inspector to turn me back on they stuck in the digital meter.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I would go back to a single light bulf and use a CFL, and replace all the bulbs you can thruout home with CFLs my electric bill dropped a lot when I did this |
#17
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![]() "Limp Arbor" wrote in message ... Recently finished upgrading to a 200A panel and replacing all the wiring in the house. Instead of Al entrance cable I used 2" conduit to get from the meter to the panel and ran copper feeds to the panel. The electric company replaced my old ham slicer meter with a digital meter. First, can I putty or caulk around the wires inside the conduit to stop the cold air from coming in? Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. Are the digital meters more accurate? Is there a way I can test the meter? There is a specific putty for sealing conduit. http://www.homehardware.ca/en/rec/in...jx7/R-I3622976 Judging by the rest of the thread, it looks like you got your math down on your new power consumption. I did my panel 2 years ago, but I'm still working on retrofitting the rest of the house. Stinkin non grounded cable... |
#18
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?
"Limp Arbor" wrote I was actually expecting the bill to go down since I got rid of all the Al/Cu-clad wire and replaced it all with copper. Maybe you have too much oxygen in the wire. Take it out and replace it with Monster Cable. Is is oxygen free. Gold plate your connectors too. |
#19
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?
"Limp Arbor" wrote Second, my electric bill is up about 15% since I started. The only additional load I added was six 75watt bulbs on two dimmers that replaced one 100watt table lamp, these run 16 hours a day. Also three hard-wired smoke detectors. Are the digital meters more accurate? Is there a way I can test the meter? At the rates here is CT, the 100W bulb is 28¢ a day, the new setup is $1.26 a day. That 98¢ difference is $29.40 a month. You can buy a new table lamp or use CFLs in place and save a few bucks. Oh, meters can be wrong too. If the added load is not the answer, have it checked out. |
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Electrical Questions | Home Repair | |||
Electrical questions | Home Repair | |||
Two electrical questions, please | Metalworking |