From: John Doe on 13 Mar 2010 13:53 Besides its main use for ordinary people, measuring household device power usage... For $20 US you can see how much electricity your computer is using at all times. You might notice that switching from a game to the desktop reduces consumption by 60 W (that will vary depending on your system). Forget about guessing whether you need better cooling... When changing your CPU or video card clock speed settings, you can see any difference in power consumption. Forget about guessing about your power supply needs... Instead of using some grossly inaccurate online power supply calculator, you can use the meter to determine your real power requirements, and instead of buying a ridiculously overpowered supply, you could easily save the cost of the meter. I know some people are not as interested in monitoring stuff, but this thing looks like it is fun enough to get mounted very close to my monitor to be easily visible at all times. Disclaimer: I could not care less about the company that makes them. If you know of a competing product, feel free to mention it.
From: John Doe on 19 Mar 2010 21:20 Steve <ivalid invalid.com> wrote: > And if you're really curious you can check on different > appliances to see how much power they are using when you think > you've turned them "off". My surge suppressor, 2.1 Speaker system, and voltage regulator use 40 W when the computer is completely off. So now I hit the voltage regulator and the surge suppressor switches at night after turning off the computer. Most other household things seem to be okay. If I am not mistaken, recharging AA batteries costs about $.01 US (one penny) per charge. That is an old question that needed answering, someday I will investigate that and other stuff further. Like switching to the desktop from a fullscreen game, minimizing a windowed (maybe DirectX or whatever) game saves a significant amount of wattage. It might not be a big deal, but minimizing a window is very easy to do. The insides of the device (made in China) look okay. The LCD module circuit board has a very small surface mount resistor obviously done by machine. The rest of it is typical handmade stuff. There are about six (blue) precision resistors, four are small 1/8 or 1/10 watt. About four transistors, a .2 W 250 V fuse, one large wattage resistor, some ordinary diodes, and some large box component. The device gets in the way of a typical outlet, it covers both sockets. After considering buying a short extension, instead I grabbed a spare power cord and soldered about 2 feet of it to the meter. That requires a soldering iron and maybe a rotary tool to shape the prongs before soldering. Added insulation and strain relief with hot melt glue to where the power cord meets the meter. It is now situated near my monitor.
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