No its not.
It kind of is (loosely).
No its not.
Just looked up the Standby power consumption of my 3 year old 42 inch plasma...anything like 35 watts???
Nope a mere 0.7watts!!!
I imagine a newer set would be the same or better!!
It kind of is (loosely).
Yeah should have said TV equipment really. however
According to this site its 88watts for all standby equipment, which is even worse
taken from http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/...usehold-appliances-standby.html#axzz2K8LcXCz3
Look at the DM's source.
Cite the DM at your peril as those figures are way off.
It is the Daily Mail, says so at the bottom of the page.![]()
Assuming that's a sarcastic comment... Actually, turning off your gas supply at the meter could save gas. The internal gas pipes in your house aren't required to be 100% gas tight!!
source: I put in all the gas pipes when i refurbished my house and when a gas fitter came round to do a drop test he explained that new pipework must not leak more than 5% and existing must not leak more than 10% - mine leaked 0%
(i think the figures were actually millibars dropped during a 2 minute test, but the percentages are roughly equivalent from memory)
Not the best analogy I guess.
Is that 5-10% a day or shorter period of time?
Er, that doesn't matter. Its a percentage.
It does. If you lose 10% a second you lose 100% every 10 seconds (or if the gas in the pipes aren't replenished and assuming leakage rate is invariant with pressure, then 1-0.9^10=65%).
Leakage is measured as a rate. Any rate has to have a time period.
No...if you're losing 10% a second, that's still 10% a minute, and 10% an hour.
No its not.dodgem said:A Watt is already a measure of energy per hour....
But... TV on standby on its own = 35 watts and hour.
Clever socket uses 0.4 watts an hour. That's 34.6 watts less.
Device costs £30 average annual cost of leaving TV etc on standby £80 so cost recoup time just under six months.