- Jul 11, 2001
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Has anyone tested their Kill A Watt? I mean tried to calibrate it? I have a Model P4400 SN: SI02883 bought 02/20/2008 off Newegg. I just did some testing. I have an extension cord with banana plugs running off from the middle of one of the wires, that go to a digital multimeter, where I get the amps. Multiplied by 120 volts, this gives me the true watts. I've used this for years before I got my Kill A Watt. I always suspected that the Kill A Watt was useless at low watts, but I'm finding it's not so hot at higher watts too. Here's what I just came up with:
My multimeter is a Metex M-3800 I've had for over 15 years, cost me around $90 I think. Decent piece of equipment AFAIK.
Metex.... Kill A Watt
------------------
76.3.... 67
50.2.... 44
38.9.... 30
26.6.... 26
20.1.... 22
14.8.... 13
11.0.... 3
6.4.... 2
3.6.... 3
3.5.... 1
2.9.... 1
I did have a problem with my Kill A Watt. I left my desktop plugged into it for several months and it stopped working at all. After a while I tried it again and it was again functional. YMMV. Has anyone else tested theirs? Can you report the results here, assuming you have a way to determine actual (i.e. reasonably accurate) watts?
My multimeter is a Metex M-3800 I've had for over 15 years, cost me around $90 I think. Decent piece of equipment AFAIK.
Metex.... Kill A Watt
------------------
76.3.... 67
50.2.... 44
38.9.... 30
26.6.... 26
20.1.... 22
14.8.... 13
11.0.... 3
6.4.... 2
3.6.... 3
3.5.... 1
2.9.... 1
I did have a problem with my Kill A Watt. I left my desktop plugged into it for several months and it stopped working at all. After a while I tried it again and it was again functional. YMMV. Has anyone else tested theirs? Can you report the results here, assuming you have a way to determine actual (i.e. reasonably accurate) watts?
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