At our house, the electricity bills were higher than we expected, so I tried this and a regular monitor with a 110 volt outlet. I completed the installation of our electromechanical gauge in about 20 minutes, leaving the monitor in the room. a kitchen where our whole family could get feedback on usage. During the day it showed clear fluctuations - from 1kW to about 12kW. To isolate the power guzzlers, I turned off all the switches and measured one suspect at a time. This has worked well for pool pumps (less than expected, but still $100 a month if we don't use timers to reduce). HVAC was harder to measure - you can measure what they're using when they're on, but you can't practically isolate them long enough to correlate actual usage with frequent on/off cycles. The plug-in model was easier to use with smaller 110 volt cells. . I've found a few used ones with negligible performance (well pump, small transformers for cordless phones, etc.). Others were significant (underground dehumidifiers). Between two monitors, we've likely identified specific and practical changes that could cut our bill by $100 a month - not bad for $150 + a few hours invested.
Sceptre C325B-144R: Advanced FreeSync HD Display with Wall Mounting and Tilt Adjustment
94 Review
LG 27MP59G-P 27 inch Monitor with FreeSync, 75Hz Refresh Rate, and 1080p HD Resolution
93 Review
Dell SE2216HV LED 💻 Monitor with 60Hz Refresh Rate
101 Review
Samsung Flat Monitor Super Slim Design 27", 1920X1080P, 75Hz, Flicker Free
112 Review
Apple AirPods Pro MagSafe RU Wireless Headphones, White
159 Review
50AA2500 EBL Individual Battery Charging System - Rechargeable Batteries
56 Review
Enhance Your Visual Experience with Logitech C260 Webcam
78 Review
💻 Get Amazing Video Quality with Logitech HD Pro Webcam C920 (Discontinued Edition)
83 Review