Originally posted by: Eli
If so, how can they tell just by reading the number difference on your meter from month to month?
Damn. Interesting.Originally posted by: stonecold3169
It's definitely true. At work we have a completely battery controlled walk-behind pallet lifter. If we charge it durning the day it costs us !$15 or so. At night it costs us just under a buck.
Originally posted by: Eli
If so, how can they tell just by reading the number difference on your meter from month to month?
Thank God we don't have a gay ass phone system like you guys in the UK. 😛Originally posted by: Lonyo
They probably also make the most money from businesses, so jcking up prices during business hours (ie: not evening/night) they can make more money. Home consumers probably use less energy than the businesses, so they make the electric companies less money really.
In the UK it's like that with phone charges, 8 until 6 is "peak" times and calls cost more, evenings and weekend they're much cheaper, because businesses make a lot of the money for service comapnies like electricity/telecoms.
Originally posted by: DrPizza
I thought the meter really measures the current, and the voltage was a little higher at night.
The current through the meter depends on electricity usage because voltage is nominally ~120V. But at night, when demand is less and the power generating stations haven't completely compensated for the drop the voltage goes up, therefore current goes down to maintain the same power usage. Or something like that.Originally posted by: boggsie
Originally posted by: DrPizza
I thought the meter really measures the current, and the voltage was a little higher at night.
😕
We just have the generic old analog meters with the spinning disc.
Originally posted by: Eli
Thank God we don't have a gay ass phone system like you guys in the UK. 😛Originally posted by: Lonyo
They probably also make the most money from businesses, so jcking up prices during business hours (ie: not evening/night) they can make more money. Home consumers probably use less energy than the businesses, so they make the electric companies less money really.
In the UK it's like that with phone charges, 8 until 6 is "peak" times and calls cost more, evenings and weekend they're much cheaper, because businesses make a lot of the money for service comapnies like electricity/telecoms.
How do people on dialup survive!?
Paying for local calls? Bah! Humbug.