No it isn't. I've seen enough of them.
Uk.d-i-yers' fridges don't cost any dollars to run.
No it isn't. I've seen enough of them.
Uk.d-i-yers' fridges don't cost any dollars to run.
I just do :-)
LOL. You really do not need more.
What do you need that much electricity for, you run a forge at home? :-D
Because they are friends with the electricity companies, and they asked nicely. Meaning, they both got more money.
Well, no such thing here. This is a modern country :-D
In the UK I can have up to three phases, which would give me 75kW.
According to this page it's 4 grand assuming you have three phases within 20m, which I do, under the pavement outside my house, since all three phases run along there to supply alternate houses with one phase each.
Which would surely negate the point of dropping the voltage in the subtransmission?
It's only illegal if you're caught. You could blow up your neighbour's meter.
An electric shower is 9kW. An electric cooker is 8kW. Does everyone in your country have cold food and cold showers or use gas?
In my case, a supercomputer.
Didn't you recently have a terrible poverty? About a decade ago?
If the final substation compensates for the voltage change, obviously you would achieve nothing, just stop and think....
Don't need to stop & think - it works - - afaik it's used by most utilities in North America. It's tested once or twice a year. John T.
It only works because some substations don't compensate. Once they upgrade them all, they've shot themselves in the foot.
Why do you need twice as much as UK residents?
Not to mention hydro!
Cheers
Phil Hobbs
Air conditioning consumes a lot less than heating.
Ah, that's your name, I wondered why kilowatts was being written at the end of everything.
Why are they still fixed tap?
Hardly. My meter is inside my house. Even if you don't get caught, they would replace with another smart meter. You gain nothing.
Mine is zero, it runs on butane gas. When I use the electric water heater, it is 1 Kw, buty mine is half that.
Mine is 1.8 Kw, induction. Very fast.
Nope, nope, and maybe. :-)
Nope.
Cost and reliability, I'd guess. The feeder voltage is well regulated. John T.
Unusual with modern housing (including my 1979 one). It makes it harder for them to inspect/read the meter.
But they would lose the cost of a meter.
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