Help Electric Bill:Supplimentry Energy Source

Chumlie

Well-Known Member
You can't get electrocuted by a 12 volt DC battery anyway, the voltage is not high enough to overcome the resistance of your skin.

When we talk about wattage, we talk about ACTUAL wattage, not equivalencies. So if your 150 w equivalent Fluoro bulb is actually 40 watts, then you need to figure the cost of 40 watts, not the equivalent 150. YOU NEVER USE the equivalent wattage for anything. Its just like saying "Hey this light bulb puts out the equivalent of 500,000,000,000 watts of light, but only uses 1 watt" Guess what? the power actually used is what your paying for (1 watt), not some farcical equivalent rating done by some light bulb manufacturers advertising department.

I run 2000 watts of power, it costs me approx $60 per month at a rate of 6 cents per KWH (Cheapest power in the nation where I am).

Appliances and electronic items DO use power when plugged in but not used. It is said that by unplugging all items not used will result in a 30-40 % energy saving on your elec bill.
Where I live a KWH is 20 cents.
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
If you want to supplement your power then you have a few choices. Generator..its usefulness kind of fluctuates with the price of fuel. Noisy and smelly.

Solar panels..expensive, only works when its light out. Big battery package to care for. Takes up a lot of space and has stringent requirements of placement.

Windpower, expensive, ugly, needs wind obviously, plus there is maintenance that needs to be done on a regular schedule. Batteries to care for.

Steam powered... lots of heat, can be noisy and humidity can be high. Need water and another source of heat like Nat Gas, which is more costly than electricity. You could burn wood though.
 
K

Keenly

Guest
rofl car battery

a car battery is designed to have one HUGE spike of around 220 amps

this creates a nice spark to light your mixture, and give the starter a turn



you cant run it off of a car battery, however, if you did some how hook up an hps to a car battery, im quite certain it wouldnt light at all

option A: light doesnt turn on

Option b: light explodes

option c: dont be an idiot with electricity
 

bluballs

Active Member
U can buy nice propane stoves now which are better designed than the old school ones. They heat a pot of water WAY faster than your stove. Saves a lot if you cook.
 

gotot

Well-Known Member
If you want to supplement your power then you have a few choices. Generator..its usefulness kind of fluctuates with the price of fuel. Noisy and smelly.

Solar panels..expensive, only works when its light out. Big battery package to care for. Takes up a lot of space and has stringent requirements of placement.

Windpower, expensive, ugly, needs wind obviously, plus there is maintenance that needs to be done on a regular schedule. Batteries to care for.

Steam powered... lots of heat, can be noisy and humidity can be high. Need water and another source of heat like Nat Gas, which is more costly than electricity. You could burn wood though.
are any of these methods cheap?
 

Chumlie

Well-Known Member
Hey like I said one day I plan to have a windmill run a generator hooked up to some batteries and a alternator to run a big hydroponic set up in the hills.

The windmill will power a generator the generator will create electricity to power up batteries(a lot of batteries), and the batteries will start the alternator. The alternator might be connected back to the generator to keep the circuit going...I haven't done to much research, I have only recently thought of doing this at my land.
 

nunof

Well-Known Member
A kw/h is how many kilowatts are used in an hour. There are 1000watts in a kw.

A 150w cfl uses .15kw/hrs. Now multiply how many hours the bulb will be running in one month by what the electric bill charges per kw/h.

18(hrs)*30(days)*.15(kw/h)*(what your electric company charges)=
 
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