ᐅ New Electricity Contract – Looking for More Affordable Electricity Providers
Created on: 30 Dec 2019 09:35
H
Hans-Maulwurf
Hello everyone,
We are almost finished with our building project.
The electricity meter has been installed, and now we have received a letter from an electricity provider stating that they are our default supplier.
The letter lists various prices per kWh but does not clearly show the exact rate.
I have read that electricity from the default supplier is usually the most expensive.
How can I find a cheaper electricity provider?
Additionally, we have two electricity meters because of the heat pump.
Do we need a separate contract for this, since the electricity for the heat pump is supposed to be cheaper than household electricity?
The issue with the default supplier concerns postal code 54636.
Can you help me?
Thank you.
We are almost finished with our building project.
The electricity meter has been installed, and now we have received a letter from an electricity provider stating that they are our default supplier.
The letter lists various prices per kWh but does not clearly show the exact rate.
I have read that electricity from the default supplier is usually the most expensive.
How can I find a cheaper electricity provider?
Additionally, we have two electricity meters because of the heat pump.
Do we need a separate contract for this, since the electricity for the heat pump is supposed to be cheaper than household electricity?
The issue with the default supplier concerns postal code 54636.
Can you help me?
Thank you.
H
HilfeHilfe1 Jan 2020 15:36Nordlys schrieb:
Besides the price, you also have to consider the power quality. For example, this green electricity causes a greenish tint on the TV when I want to listen to old marches on the record player, like "We March Against England" or "The Hazelnut is Dark Brown." It always loses about 30 volts, and the whole sound becomes hollow. So we only buy good Czech nuclear power from E.ON, clear picture on the TV, excellent voltage stability for the marches. To me, that's worth paying a few extra euros. Happy New Year, hang in there through the storm. Karsten Oh, you don’t always arrange a test supply of electricity in battery form? I always do that and slowly drain the battery to find out the vintage and origin of the electricity. Only good German wind power comes into my house. I don’t like this foreign stuff.
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hampshire1 Jan 2020 15:57HilfeHilfe schrieb:
I don’t like this foreign stuffThey’re speaking English on the radio now – is that because of the electricity?Nordlys schrieb:
Besides the price, you also have to consider the power quality. This green eco-friendly electricity, for example, makes the TV picture look greenish when you want to listen to old marches on the turntable, like “Wir fahren gegen Engeland” or “Schwarzbraun ist die Haselnuss.” Then it always drops by about 30 volts (30 V) and the whole sound becomes thin. Therefore, we only buy good Czech nuclear power from E.ON—clear picture on the TV, top-notch voltage stability. That extra two or three euros is worth it to me. Happy New Year, stay strong in the storm. Karsten Your electrician must have done something wrong. You need to connect the rotation direction clockwise, then the marches will sound right! A counterclockwise, left-leaning rotation just can’t work well!
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hampshire1 Jan 2020 16:55... and do not charge the electric car with three-phase current unless you want to take part in a drifting challenge!
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HilfeHilfe1 Jan 2020 19:06hampshire schrieb:
... and don’t charge your electric car with three-phase power unless you want to join a drift challenge!My electric car has a manual crank and emergency pedals. If nothing else works, there’s a hamster wheel in the trunk for radioactive contaminated Chinese hamsters. They work really well. Everything is, of course, environmentally friendly.