Unplug for Dollars: Stop 'Vampire Power' Waste
#3
Posted 10 November 2008 - 05:58 AM
Most of the time you have to cut back on consumption to save but this is not always the case.
If you have to cool your office,you do not want energy vampires and tungsten light bulbs.
All of them produce heat, very good heat.
They generate heat more efficiently (and with less cost) than your main heating system.
One watt used always produce one what of heat.
Use your energy vampires and use your
old light bulbs to heat you
when it is cold outside.
cBien
#5
Posted 15 November 2008 - 05:45 AM
Your article should be titled "Don't Buy Modern Convenient Appliances: Stop the Power Drain". Almost anything we buy today that uses energy uses part of that energy to make life more convenient for us. It is these features that sell the product. If you are going to spend the extra dollars to buy these features it would then be ridiculous then to disable these features.Buy featureless versions first thus saving at both ends.
#6
Posted 16 November 2008 - 09:22 AM
Maybe manufacturers can figure out a way to "trickle" enough juice to keep the above going but kill power needs to everthing else.
#7
Posted 17 November 2008 - 03:38 AM
#8
Posted 17 November 2008 - 04:10 AM
#9
Posted 17 November 2008 - 05:39 AM
should have a way to have there
#10
Posted 17 November 2008 - 06:35 AM
I realize this will cost a few pennies more for the extra 12-20 inches of 14 gauge wire. However, with nearly every power strip I see on the shelf, the switch is placed next to the cord. So when I plug in the power strip at the wall and plug in the devices it controls, I have to reach through the cord nest to the back of the strip to reach the switch. Or I have to double the supply cord next to the power strip body to put the switch within easy reach. Both conditions suck.
#11
Posted 17 November 2008 - 08:02 AM
Word of caution: some devices that are designed to stay on all the time don't react well to being turned on and off from the power switch. I learned that the hard way after losing a couple of TVs that died within a few months of being put on a power strip.
#12
Posted 17 November 2008 - 06:00 PM
Still, we all may want to save a few extra bucks, and there's nothing wrong with that.
Message was edited by: AuroraDizon - removed directly personal argumentative sentence
#13
Posted 17 November 2008 - 09:15 PM
#14
Posted 17 November 2008 - 09:40 PM
#15
Posted 17 November 2008 - 11:51 PM
But for the wireless phone, cable modem, router, Gigabit switch and the small print server, I turn them on 24/7. Shut them off would be too much trouble, not worth it. These small things, just use up 25 watt together, not a lot.
#16
Posted 18 November 2008 - 08:28 AM
#17
Posted 21 November 2008 - 07:48 PM
Let me try again, this time more gently, so that no one's feelings get hurt. If instead of listening to AM talk radio one actually reads the article, there is nothing -NOTHING- in there that says that you should scale back your lifestyle, not drive your SUV, not buy new stuff. All the article is doing is to give some tips to save a few bucks and, if you care, to do something for the environment. Don't care about the environment? No problem. You can still save a few bucks. The author even states that you cannot and should not even unplug all of your appliances/electronics. My point is that, in the long run, it may actually be better to replace old appliances/electronics ---i.e., buy new stuff--- because they are more energy efficient. It is troubling, though, that some people would actually use even rational, cost-benefit analyses like the one presented in the article to score cheap political points and perpetuate ideological stereotypes. Arguments about entropy, frankly, are logically contradictory. We all know the earth is going to be swalled up at some point in the future, and that's exactly the reason for not wanting to speed the process up.
#18
Posted 25 November 2008 - 01:54 PM
One watt used from the electrical grid ALWAYS produces one watt of heat.
That is, for the purpose of heat generation, fan heaters are just as efficient as light bulbs or anything else: they all have 100% efficiency in generating heat.
The problem is that whenever you use a single watt from the electrical grid, that single watt has been produced by converting more watts of energy which were available in another form: the difference has been wasted heating the environment.
So we should use our heating systems and good insulation to keep us warm :), and save electrical energy.
Best Regards
Stefano
#20
Posted 18 March 2009 - 03:54 PM
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