They actually use neon lamps, as they can be plugged straight into the 240V.
I always thought the switch is used to control electrical gate, if you leave it on, the doors are open and the electricity is allowed to come out
I always thought the switch is used to control electrical gate, if you leave it on, the doors are open and the electricity is allowed to come out
ball lightning will form and hadoken strike you to the faceSo what's going on here then?
That highly depends on what type of device is plugged in. Electronic devices are very efficiently on standby. Older appliances that have a high wattage are often different. I know old CRTs are quite bad for it.
Also not cutting off the mains gas supply wastes gas, even if you aren't using it.
I wouldn't trust this gas "engineer" for anything if I were you.
And is is why the UK needs to protect the term engineer so such idiots don't devalue true engineers.
Its estimated that standby devices cost UK house holders approx £650 million a year and and generate approx 3 million tonnes of C02. Hardly efficient or a good use of our money. Knowing this doesn't stop me leaving my TV on standby, although it probably should.
Considering the amount of businesses that leave massive amounts of lights on, I'm personally not concerned about the amount of CO2 produced by leaving my stuff on standby.
Not to say I'm wasteful, I turn off lights all round the house when I'm not using them and I don't have everything running all the time (it costs money, after all) but I'm not going to start reaching round the back of desks, TV units etc to turn things off just to save a few pennies.
Not to mention the fact that most TVs, set-top boxes, routers etc all rely on being on standby overnight so they can get firmware/software updates.
Why is it flimsy? Seems like a more legitimate reason for leaving stuff on standby than "I'm just too lazy to do it".