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#1
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Power Saver device
Can this 18KW Power Energy saver useful for energy saving? (for desktop PC,
250W power supply) http://eecrest.com/enjoy24hours/278-1.jpg http://eecrest.com/enjoy24hours/278-2.jpg "It uses a state of the art electrical technology to actively monitor and improve the power factor of electrical appliances, suit for household or office. The technology optimizes the voltage and current demands to reduce the active power demands, reduce electricity bills by up to 35%." There is a note: "Note: Please make sure that it is installed as close as possible to the point of entry of your electricity supply in order to detect all loads before the meter and adjust the power factor accordingly". Can be connected to one Saver a few electrical devices(PC, TV, with total power less than 18KW) via multi socket extension lead? Does anyone have experience with such a device and if so what kind / brand do you use? |
#2
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Power Saver device
Corvet wrote:
Can this 18KW Power Energy saver useful for energy saving? (for desktop PC, 250W power supply) http://eecrest.com/enjoy24hours/278-1.jpg http://eecrest.com/enjoy24hours/278-2.jpg "It uses a state of the art electrical technology to actively monitor and improve the power factor of electrical appliances, suit for household or office. The technology optimizes the voltage and current demands to reduce the active power demands, reduce electricity bills by up to 35%." There is a note: "Note: Please make sure that it is installed as close as possible to the point of entry of your electricity supply in order to detect all loads before the meter and adjust the power factor accordingly". Can be connected to one Saver a few electrical devices(PC, TV, with total power less than 18KW) via multi socket extension lead? Does anyone have experience with such a device and if so what kind / brand do you use? SCAM. Think about it. If everybody could save 35%, don't you think it'd be a REQUIREMENT imposed by our governments? Wouldn't the power company implement it rather than building new power plants? In fact, they DO implement it but on much larger segment of the grid. Power factor improvement, IS good for the power companies and ultimately, the environment. It's a requirement for newer electronic devices. BUT...YOU very likely pay for Kilowatts. Power factor correction helps Volt-Amps and makes approximately zero difference in your power bill. There's a local guy selling 'em on Craigslist. I email him and he's eager to come out with his demo and gimme a demonstration on HIS meter. When I tell him we're gonna measure the effectiveness by measuring how fast the wheel on the power company's meter goes around with and without his device, he never responds back. Put this in the file with the 200mpg carburetor that "the oil companies don't want you to know about", and the "add three inches..." |
#3
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Power Saver device
Corvet wrote:
Does anyone have experience with such a device and if so what kind / brand do you use? None, but I know it is a scam. Hint 1, a bad power factor doesn't cost me more money. Hint 2, get a cheap power meter with a power facor read out, then look up how to do the power factor correction and buy the appropriate capacitor, then either add it to the motor or box it for the motor to plug into. Far cheaper. |
#4
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Power Saver device
Corvet wrote:
Can this 18KW Power Energy saver useful for energy saving? (for desktop PC, 250W power supply) http://eecrest.com/enjoy24hours/278-1.jpg http://eecrest.com/enjoy24hours/278-2.jpg "It uses a state of the art electrical technology to actively monitor and improve the power factor of electrical appliances, suit for household or office. The technology optimizes the voltage and current demands to reduce the active power demands, reduce electricity bills by up to 35%." There is a note: "Note: Please make sure that it is installed as close as possible to the point of entry of your electricity supply in order to detect all loads before the meter and adjust the power factor accordingly". Can be connected to one Saver a few electrical devices(PC, TV, with total power less than 18KW) via multi socket extension lead? Does anyone have experience with such a device and if so what kind / brand do you use? I have a bridge for sale in Brooklyn, really cheap..... |
#5
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Power Saver device
Corvet wrote:
Can this 18KW Power Energy saver useful for energy saving? (for desktop PC, 250W power supply) http://eecrest.com/enjoy24hours/278-1.jpg http://eecrest.com/enjoy24hours/278-2.jpg "It uses a state of the art electrical technology to actively monitor and improve the power factor of electrical appliances, suit for household or office. The technology optimizes the voltage and current demands to reduce the active power demands, reduce electricity bills by up to 35%." There is a note: "Note: Please make sure that it is installed as close as possible to the point of entry of your electricity supply in order to detect all loads before the meter and adjust the power factor accordingly". Can be connected to one Saver a few electrical devices(PC, TV, with total power less than 18KW) via multi socket extension lead? Does anyone have experience with such a device and if so what kind / brand do you use? If you want a PC power supply to waste less power, get one with a good rating. The "80 Plus" system rates supplies to help identify ones that are more efficient at power conversion. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16817121080 Efficiency of that unit is 90% from 111W to 448W (in other words, that design is noteworthy for achieving good results over a wide range). http://www.jonnyguru.com/modules.php...tory2&reid=219 Regular ATX supplies are 68% efficient, which means the interior of the power supply generates a fair amount of heat. An 80% to 90% efficient ATX supply, can reduce that kind of waste. The Kingwin power supply can leave its fan turned off, a lot of the time. You then have to consider the pay back period, for such an ATX supply upgrade. If the Kingwin supply costs $149 USD, it would take years for the power savings to pay off. ******* The efficiency of a supply internally, is to some extent independent of the power factor issue. (In other words, buying a new supply could well save a higher percentage, than any PFC scheme might.) Power factor correction is mandated on ATX supplies now, in the interests of the utility companies, rather than for the home consumer. In a business setting, ATX supplies with power factor correction makes sense (because they're billed on kVA), while for home consumers this is largely a "don't care" consideration. So the inclusion of PFC in ATX supplies in North America, is to help large business installations. For example, my former employer had a 30 megawatt feed, powering lots and lots of computers (so many computers, that the heat from the computers provided the heating for the buildings). In such a situation, a person purchasing equipment, will be looking for PFC due to the size of the loads involved. For a home consumer, with one 150W PC, this isn't an issue that needs to be addressed. Home heating and cooling are much larger loads in North America (central air conditioning or heating systems), compared to the 150W idling PC. Your original question, may have to do with a "power factor correction" type device. An example of information on such a solution is described here. In some countries, they may bill kVA as well as kW, while as far as I know, my meter only measures kW (kW-hours). I pay a total price right now of around $0.17 per kWh. My 150W PC costs me about 3 cents per hour, while it is running. http://www.reliableplant.com/Read/13...tor-correction The paragraph "Why correct the power factor?" here, helps explain all it is doing is reducing the drop in the distribution wires "Rline". In my house, that drop in voltage is pretty damn small. http://home.earthlink.net/~jimlux/hv/pfc.htm If your PC ATX supply already has passive PFC or active PFC in it, that little box from eecrest.com will do nothing. Similarly, if you're running an incandescent light bulb, the eecrest.com box will do nothing. It might even waste a few watts itself. In the past, if you compared an ATX supply with active PFC, versus one without active PFC, the PFC circuit itself wastes a bit of power. But in the larger picture, it helps the utility company, and means the size of conductors between the power poles, can be reduced a bit. Not all of the current that flows in the transmission lines, is "billable" current. Paul |
#6
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Power Saver device
Installed before the meter and has some outlets where you can connect some stuff. Power company would be really happy about this. |
#7
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Power Saver device
edfair wrote:
Installed before the meter and has some outlets where you can connect some stuff. Power company would be really happy about this. Installing before the meter definitely saves power. Now why didn't I think of that. Paul |
#8
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Power Saver device (Scam)
On 4/20/2011 9:31 PM, edfair wrote:
Installed before the meter and has some outlets where you can connect some stuff. Power company would be really happy about this. I haven't looked it over (as in NOT) but installing something "before the meter" is a definite bad. Kinda funny, as I spent the last two years as a "Meter Electrician" or a public power utility. There's that "little something" called a meter seal. Cutting that means someone (like me) has to investigate the "why". My employer was (now retired) fairly easy on most of the usual "cut seal" issues (needed to cut power to the premise for a rewire, etc) but "we" were always on the lookout for power theft. I've seen so many hare-brained ideas on the "power factor correction" that I'm surprised that the "meter base fatality" list is so small. I pulled a "cut seal" meter that had so many capacitors/toroids/resistors (on the line side, before the meter) in the meter socket that I had a line crew cut them at the pole. "Current Diversion" did a detailed eval of these "mods". If anything, it bumped their bill by 10% .. smooth jm/ove, exlax. -- "**** this is it, all the pieces do fit. We're like that crazy old man jumping out of the alleyway with a baseball bat, saying, "Remember me mother****er?" Jim “Dandy” Mangrum |
#9
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Power Saver device
On 4/21/2011 9:03 AM, Paul wrote:
edfair wrote: Installed before the meter and has some outlets where you can connect some stuff. Power company would be really happy about this. Installing before the meter definitely saves power. Now why didn't I think of that. Paul And wait for the Meter Electrician (as in me before I retired) t5o examine the 'cut seal' on your meter? You don't want that.... -- "**** this is it, all the pieces do fit. We're like that crazy old man jumping out of the alleyway with a baseball bat, saying, "Remember me mother****er?" Jim “Dandy” Mangrum |
#10
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Power Saver device (Scam)
Nobody (Revisited) wrote:
On 4/20/2011 9:31 PM, edfair wrote: Installed before the meter and has some outlets where you can connect some stuff. Power company would be really happy about this. I haven't looked it over (as in NOT) but installing something "before the meter" is a definite bad. Kinda funny, as I spent the last two years as a "Meter Electrician" or a public power utility. There's that "little something" called a meter seal. Cutting that means someone (like me) has to investigate the "why". My employer was (now retired) fairly easy on most of the usual "cut seal" issues (needed to cut power to the premise for a rewire, etc) but "we" were always on the lookout for power theft. I've seen so many hare-brained ideas on the "power factor correction" that I'm surprised that the "meter base fatality" list is so small. I pulled a "cut seal" meter that had so many capacitors/toroids/resistors (on the line side, before the meter) in the meter socket that I had a line crew cut them at the pole. "Current Diversion" did a detailed eval of these "mods". If anything, it bumped their bill by 10% .. smooth jm/ove, exlax. Here's an example of using a similar concept, to scam the gullible. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-s...ity-bills.html Apparently the perps make phone calls through GMail. The caller ID is always 760-705-8888. Hilarious. Paul |
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