Good morning everyone,
I wanted to ask what your house’s electricity consumption is at night when everything is quiet and sleeping, so what is running continuously?
We have a newly built house, moved in summer 2019. Our building services include underfloor heating (air-to-water heat pump), controlled mechanical ventilation (runs at full power 3 times a day for 2 hours each, then reduced), a photovoltaic system, and otherwise the usual nighttime appliances (phone charger plugged into USB outlet, e-bikes charging occasionally, 2 TVs on standby, Alexas on standby, etc.).
At night, we have a continuous consumption of about 232W (with ventilation running at reduced power and when the heat pump is not producing). I can see this in the app for the photovoltaic system. From 0:00 to 6:30 a.m. we consume about 2.8 kWh.
How about you?
Best regards
I wanted to ask what your house’s electricity consumption is at night when everything is quiet and sleeping, so what is running continuously?
We have a newly built house, moved in summer 2019. Our building services include underfloor heating (air-to-water heat pump), controlled mechanical ventilation (runs at full power 3 times a day for 2 hours each, then reduced), a photovoltaic system, and otherwise the usual nighttime appliances (phone charger plugged into USB outlet, e-bikes charging occasionally, 2 TVs on standby, Alexas on standby, etc.).
At night, we have a continuous consumption of about 232W (with ventilation running at reduced power and when the heat pump is not producing). I can see this in the app for the photovoltaic system. From 0:00 to 6:30 a.m. we consume about 2.8 kWh.
How about you?
Best regards
Daniel-Sp schrieb:
Well, eon and green electricity...It's just window dressing with every provider... Price is what matters, the rest doesn't concern me. Eon's new customer promotions are simply great.Fuchur schrieb:
He probably only included his discounts Yes, of course I did, because in the end, that’s the only amount you actually pay. Prices are a bit lower in my region as well; in the neighboring village, electricity costs a few cents more. And this is only for household electricity. For the heat pump, I pay 21 cents, which isn’t bad considering I haven’t switched suppliers.
D
Daniel-Sp25 Dec 2020 19:49And now the calculations begin, to see if the savings from the cheaper heat pump electricity are greater than the costs of the second meter... :p
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