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Saving Electricity
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Green guidelines recommend disabling standby mode on various household appliances.
When I think about it, my TV for example must be on standby for about 20 hours in each 24, which means 140hrs per week or (reaches for calculator) 7,280 hrs per year!
To switch off standby mode I would have to struggle behind the set to get to the wall-socket or likewise to the TV connection.
Would putting a torpedo switch in the cable be a sensible & easy way to do this please?
When I think about it, my TV for example must be on standby for about 20 hours in each 24, which means 140hrs per week or (reaches for calculator) 7,280 hrs per year!
To switch off standby mode I would have to struggle behind the set to get to the wall-socket or likewise to the TV connection.
Would putting a torpedo switch in the cable be a sensible & easy way to do this please?
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No best answer has yet been selected by Khandro. 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.Back in the late 70s when I was earning a dishonest living in higher education, we had the 3 day week & "The Winter of Discontent", my university then had a sticker placed next to every switch in the entire institution asking you to 'Switch off when not in use'.
The idea wasn't to save money so much as to save electricity for the nation.
A noble cause, which went out of the window with privatisation in 1990 when shareholders in the new companies wanted, then as now, you to use as much electricity as you possibly can, & sod the nation.
The idea wasn't to save money so much as to save electricity for the nation.
A noble cause, which went out of the window with privatisation in 1990 when shareholders in the new companies wanted, then as now, you to use as much electricity as you possibly can, & sod the nation.
7300 hours per year, at just 1.4W (which, according to various sources I've just googled seems to be the typical power consumption of a TV in standby mode) comes to 10.22 kWh.
Prior to recent/forthcoming prices rises, each kWh typically cost about 20p, so fitting a switch (at the 'old' prices) might save you around £2. Allowing for a possible doubling of energy prices, that takes your saving up to around £4 per year, which happens to be the same as the price of a switch:
Amazon.co.uk User Recommendation
You'll certainly be doing your bit for the planet by fitting such a switch (as long as you keep remembering to actually use it, of course!) but don't expect to be able to take any cruises using the money that you've saved ;-)
Prior to recent/forthcoming prices rises, each kWh typically cost about 20p, so fitting a switch (at the 'old' prices) might save you around £2. Allowing for a possible doubling of energy prices, that takes your saving up to around £4 per year, which happens to be the same as the price of a switch:
Amazon.co.uk User Recommendation
You'll certainly be doing your bit for the planet by fitting such a switch (as long as you keep remembering to actually use it, of course!) but don't expect to be able to take any cruises using the money that you've saved ;-)
jim; There are about 30 million TV sets in the UK. How much electricity could be saved nationally ?
Whether you like it or not, energy is going to have to be saved (& probably rationed) in the coming years. As I have said, it isn't necessarily about your or my money it will become an existential problem; that is unless you can come up with some miraculous new source of supply.
Whether you like it or not, energy is going to have to be saved (& probably rationed) in the coming years. As I have said, it isn't necessarily about your or my money it will become an existential problem; that is unless you can come up with some miraculous new source of supply.