Home & Garden0 min ago
Smart Meter View
34 Answers
We had a smart meter fitted yesterday, and I'm just figuring out the little display unit. It has provided 5 minutes of interest and I'm over it already.
I have no desire to reminded how much our electricty is costing us hour by hour, its not good for my soul! Its useful to have the readings send electronically and no more estimated bills, otherwise it can sit in the corner and keep quiet!
Do you have one? What display do you leave yours on? Do you look at it anymore?
I have no desire to reminded how much our electricty is costing us hour by hour, its not good for my soul! Its useful to have the readings send electronically and no more estimated bills, otherwise it can sit in the corner and keep quiet!
Do you have one? What display do you leave yours on? Do you look at it anymore?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Maydup. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I categorically refused one, and they (Npower) took me off their list. I phone in a reading for gas and electricity every 90 days and pay by quarterly direct debit, so I know what the bill will be before it arrives. 'Smart' meters are of no benefit whatsoever to the consumer - are we meant to sit there watching it clocking up the cost?
You do NOT have to have one.
You do NOT have to have one.
I'm not against the smart meter, otherwise I wouldnt have one installed yesterday. whats not to like? It confirms what price they are charging me at my fingertips, and how mych I'm using, and it saves me getting the steps and my torch out and sending in the readings.
But I dont think I want to watch it day and night!
But I dont think I want to watch it day and night!
Maydup, you ask 'what's not to like'?
Well, for a start it means your supplier has remote control over your supply, and could cut it off at any time. It also means that in the future, tariffs could be brought in that change throughout the day according to demand and you would have no real idea about what you're paying at any given time - unless, of course, you sit there watching it.
Smart meters won't work properly if you have a poor signal in your area.
It could make it much more difficult to switch suppliers, especially if you have had one of the duff first-generation meters fitted.
Well, for a start it means your supplier has remote control over your supply, and could cut it off at any time. It also means that in the future, tariffs could be brought in that change throughout the day according to demand and you would have no real idea about what you're paying at any given time - unless, of course, you sit there watching it.
Smart meters won't work properly if you have a poor signal in your area.
It could make it much more difficult to switch suppliers, especially if you have had one of the duff first-generation meters fitted.