- Feb 22, 2007
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I had a friend over today that wanted to show me his new purchase, a fluke 1735 , so I thought I would do a quick comparison with the killawatt.
The killawatt isn't a bad meter, especially for the price.
Its does have its flaws though.
Comparing it with a fluke 1735 I found a few differences.
The killawatt is terrible at inductive loads, so don't use it for measuring those.
Inductive loads would be things typically with motors, compressors.
So not good for measuring a refirgertator or washing machine.
It measures them , but its results are not .2% accurate.
Refrigerator with compressor running 921 watts, fluke 841.8 watts
Its not accurate at measurements of small wattages.
Things like the power usage of a dvd player in standby mode are not accurate.
Killawatt said dvd player was using about 5 watts, fluke 2.64 watts.
The sampling rate is very low compared to meters like the fluke, so it can miss quick spikes or surges in usage . When I used it to measure the power usage of a 51" hdtv at turn on, it constantly gave different readings. Range from 410 watts to 504 watts. Fluke 448 to 453 watts.
PC, using a 750watt Ultra lsp model.
Core2, running at 3.3ghz, 7900gtx , pc running gelato (nvidia software that uses the gpu as a fpu, while also using the host cpu), maxes both.
Killawatt 316watts, fluke 329watts.
All that said its still a good device to use.
Its not as good as some of the professional tools like the fluke 1735, but then the fluke meter is over $2000 while the killawatt is less than 20.00
Be aware this is a very old thread.
admin allisolm
The killawatt isn't a bad meter, especially for the price.
Its does have its flaws though.
Comparing it with a fluke 1735 I found a few differences.
The killawatt is terrible at inductive loads, so don't use it for measuring those.
Inductive loads would be things typically with motors, compressors.
So not good for measuring a refirgertator or washing machine.
It measures them , but its results are not .2% accurate.
Refrigerator with compressor running 921 watts, fluke 841.8 watts
Its not accurate at measurements of small wattages.
Things like the power usage of a dvd player in standby mode are not accurate.
Killawatt said dvd player was using about 5 watts, fluke 2.64 watts.
The sampling rate is very low compared to meters like the fluke, so it can miss quick spikes or surges in usage . When I used it to measure the power usage of a 51" hdtv at turn on, it constantly gave different readings. Range from 410 watts to 504 watts. Fluke 448 to 453 watts.
PC, using a 750watt Ultra lsp model.
Core2, running at 3.3ghz, 7900gtx , pc running gelato (nvidia software that uses the gpu as a fpu, while also using the host cpu), maxes both.
Killawatt 316watts, fluke 329watts.
All that said its still a good device to use.
Its not as good as some of the professional tools like the fluke 1735, but then the fluke meter is over $2000 while the killawatt is less than 20.00
Be aware this is a very old thread.
admin allisolm
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