Kaido
Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
- Feb 14, 2004
- 51,096
- 6,954
- 136
I just ordered a TED Pro Home, along with a couple of Spyders - it's a pretty slick power monitoring system:
http://www.theenergydetective.com/tedprohome.html
I want to see (1) how much power I'm using, so that I can (2) spec out a whole-house generator at some point down the road. I like the idea of a Tesla PowerWall, but at about $7k each installed per 14 kWh battery (and I can't do solar panels where I'm at, so if I'm out of power for more than a day they won't recharge), a permanently-connected natural-gas generator seems like it would be more economical. All I have right now is my Kill-a-watt, but that (1) doesn't cover data recording (for trends over time) and (2) doesn't handle my 240V appliances, like my laundry dryer. I'm planning on aggregating the data to see power spikes, max usage, etc.
http://www.theenergydetective.com/tedprohome.html
I want to see (1) how much power I'm using, so that I can (2) spec out a whole-house generator at some point down the road. I like the idea of a Tesla PowerWall, but at about $7k each installed per 14 kWh battery (and I can't do solar panels where I'm at, so if I'm out of power for more than a day they won't recharge), a permanently-connected natural-gas generator seems like it would be more economical. All I have right now is my Kill-a-watt, but that (1) doesn't cover data recording (for trends over time) and (2) doesn't handle my 240V appliances, like my laundry dryer. I'm planning on aggregating the data to see power spikes, max usage, etc.