It genuinely concerns me that the general populous still believes that their TV sitting on standby is costing them a fortune. Says quite a lot really.
surely that depends on the TV, I thought old TV's ran at 75% in standby

It genuinely concerns me that the general populous still believes that their TV sitting on standby is costing them a fortune. Says quite a lot really.
What are your calculations for this, out of interest?
I've just done a bit of research on this - a modern TV that subscribes to the 1 watt policy, assuming a 10 pence per kilowatt unit price, would cost £0.074p per month to run. That is seven point four pence. A month.
Assuming an older TV that sucks up 10 watts on standby, thats still only £0.74 per month. I'm sure as hell not going crawling under my TV to save less than £1.00 a month
It genuinely concerns me that the general populous still believes that their TV sitting on standby is costing them a fortune. Says quite a lot really.
Check the consoles. My colleague at Sony told me some of them sit idle on the internet which can draw a bit more than you think. It's worth getting a cheap power monitor from eBay.
surely that depends on the TV, I thought old TV's ran at 75% in standby![]()
Correct me if I'm wrong.. but @ 10p/kw (although mine is 20p!)
Watts x Hours x Days / 1000 = pence/month
Old: 10 x 24 x 31 / 1000 = 0.744kW/month x 10p = 7.44p/month
New: 1 x 24 x 31 / 1000 = 0.0744kW/month x 10p = 0.744p/month
Factor of 10 out, but still not HUGE amounts.
Personally I have one of those ones that you use your TV remote to switch on and off. Saves about 10-20W as it turns off speakers, TV, PS3, etc.