B
Bob Monsen
Guest
"George" <gh424NO824SPAM@cox.net> wrote in message
news:Vcrtj.801$QC.294@newsfe20.lga...
Bob Pease has a good article about how a watt meter works, and a working
schematic.
http://electronicdesign.com/Articles/Index.cfm?AD=1&ArticleID=2190
OTOH, I concur with the folks who say a Kill-A-Watt is the way to go. Much
more reliable, less dangerous, and quite fun.
Regarding how it works, all you need to do is to get a very low value shunt
resistor, and then multiply the voltage across the resistor with the voltage
across the device in series (in real time). That gives you instantaneous
power. You then integrate that to get the result over time, which is of
course energy. You need to scale the result to get it in kW hours. His meter
given in the link above does it with an analog circuit, which is pretty
cool. One can also do the math with a microcontroller, which is probably how
the Kill-A-Watt does it.
Electricity is dangerous, of course, so if you do this, keep one hand in
your back pocket at all times when you are near any live wires. The thing
that kills is AC across your heart, which can induce fibrillation.
Regards,
Bob Monsen
news:Vcrtj.801$QC.294@newsfe20.lga...
I'd like to measure how much current various plugged-in devices draw
when they are "off". I have a digital multimeter that will measure
AC voltage. So I thought maybe I could place a small-value resistor
in series in one of the AC lines, and measure the voltage drop
across it. And then just calculate the current. But I don't know
if the results would be at all accurate.
Has anyone tried that? Is there a better way?
Bob Pease has a good article about how a watt meter works, and a working
schematic.
http://electronicdesign.com/Articles/Index.cfm?AD=1&ArticleID=2190
OTOH, I concur with the folks who say a Kill-A-Watt is the way to go. Much
more reliable, less dangerous, and quite fun.
Regarding how it works, all you need to do is to get a very low value shunt
resistor, and then multiply the voltage across the resistor with the voltage
across the device in series (in real time). That gives you instantaneous
power. You then integrate that to get the result over time, which is of
course energy. You need to scale the result to get it in kW hours. His meter
given in the link above does it with an analog circuit, which is pretty
cool. One can also do the math with a microcontroller, which is probably how
the Kill-A-Watt does it.
Electricity is dangerous, of course, so if you do this, keep one hand in
your back pocket at all times when you are near any live wires. The thing
that kills is AC across your heart, which can induce fibrillation.
Regards,
Bob Monsen