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Maybe OT: How Much Does 24/7 Shuttle 200W.........

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MagicUK

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May 21, 2004, 1:31:42 PM5/21/04
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cost to keep on all day 24/7 as we received are bill which is £390 for
6months and i want to know how much my comp could cost daily?

many thanks


John McGaw

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May 21, 2004, 3:09:27 PM5/21/04
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"MagicUK" <c_boys_uk@REMOVE yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:40ae3d02$0$25326$cc9e...@news-text.dial.pipex.com...

> cost to keep on all day 24/7 as we received are bill which is £390 for
> 6months and i want to know how much my comp could cost daily?
>
> many thanks
>
How much it costs to run depends on 1. what power costs (probably stated as
£ per KW/Hour), 2. how much power is being consumed on average, 3. and for
how long it is being consumed.

The power consumption is highly variable. My Shuttle SB65G2 with 3gHz P4,
512mB, Plextor DVD burner, 160gB hard drive, 9600XT video is consuming 185W
as I type this. To be fair, the UPS that it is plugged into is consuming
that much power but it is also providing power to the 17" LCD monitor, a
small speaker setup, and even a 12W compact flourescent light on the desk.
And the computer is running a distributed processing weather program (CPDN
from Oxford University) which saturates the CPU doing computations. Stopping
that program leaving only normal background tasks running drops the power
consumption to < 130W.

So, I can calculate my power cost by multiplying power consumed multipled by
the number of hours and converting to KWhours and then dividing by the cost
of a single KWhour. Since power is relatively inexpensive at ~$0.07 per
KWhour where I live my Shuttle costs something like $0.31 to operate every
day.

To find out what your computer costs to run you need to know what the power
consumption is, measured or guesstimated, and what your local power provider
charges per unit.
--
John McGaw
[Knoxville, TN, USA]
http://johnmcgaw.com


John McGaw

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May 21, 2004, 4:23:53 PM5/21/04
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> So, I can calculate my power cost by multiplying power consumed multipled
by
> the number of hours and converting to KWhours and then dividing by the
cost
> of a single KWhour. Since power is relatively inexpensive at ~$0.07 per
> KWhour where I live my Shuttle costs something like $0.31 to operate every
> day.

Damn! I never seem to be able to proofread my own writing. In the paragraph
above the divide should clearly be multiply. I did the maths correctly but
typed wrongly. Sorry for any confusion...


kony

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May 21, 2004, 5:35:32 PM5/21/04
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Random guesstimation of avg wattage is 140W, 30W more for large CRT or 30W
less for LCD monitor.

http://www.ukpower.co.uk/running-costs-elec.asp

R.J.Dunlop

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May 22, 2004, 2:20:23 AM5/22/04
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Well looking at my UK bill I think power costs me 6.6p/kWh so a 200 Watt
load for 182.5 days is going to cost:

200 / 1000 * 0.066 * 24 * 182.5 = £57.816

Suggest you look elsewhere for the source of the bill. Emersion heater
left on 24/7 perhaps ?
--
Bob Dunlop

Quentin Stephens

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May 22, 2004, 9:47:38 AM5/22/04
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"MagicUK" <c_boys_uk@REMOVE yahoo.com> wrote in
news:40ae3d02$0$25326$cc9e...@news-text.dial.pipex.com:

> cost to keep on all day 24/7 as we received are bill which is
> £390 for 6months and i want to know how much my comp could cost
> daily?

A common reason for a huge bill is that they've actually read your
meter instead of guestimated it.

David Jones

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May 24, 2004, 3:26:03 AM5/24/04
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It sounds like someone is trying to bill you for other overhead. Your
computer by itself does not use that much elelctricity. However, if your
host provider is billing you for a portion of his overhead .... you got
screwed. smile!

"MagicUK" <c_boys_uk@REMOVE yahoo.com> wrote in message
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Bobmoorhead

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Jan 30, 2014, 8:08:22 PM1/30/14
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"kony" <sp...@spam.com> wrote in message
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Very poor for £390.

I can run heater 4000w for this money all week long.


R. Mark Clayton

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Jan 31, 2014, 6:25:55 AM1/31/14
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"Bobmoorhead" <bobmo...@nomail.com> wrote in message
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200W for 24/7 for 180 days = 864kWh.

At ~20p a unit that would be about £180 or £1 per day.

You will save money if

You have economy 7
You put the monitor into standby after a short period away from the screen
You put the PC into standby after as longer period of non use (but this may
upset peripherals)


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