What was your electric usage in December?

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Imp

Lifer
Feb 8, 2000
18,828
184
106
Haven't checked recently, but historically, it's been ~1200 kWh in the winter months. Semi-detached 2400 sq.ft.-ish house (I included basement since it's heated).

Biggest spenders are probably water heater, furnace, and me. That 40" old LCD (not LED) TV and my ~150W computer system add up over a full day.
 

edro

Lifer
Apr 5, 2002
24,326
68
91
~20kWh electricity / week for the last 3 weeks of December.
My average use is about 15kWh electricity / week.
EDIT:
Netherlands.
I pay about 38 Euro a month for gas and electricity. And still i get every year money refunded because of my low energy use.
I'll bite.

How!?!?!
 

IndyColtsFan

Lifer
Sep 22, 2007
33,655
688
126
1510 KWh. Bill was $189.

EDIT: Yay for relatively cheap electricity -- I looked back and the high from last year was 2869 kWh and the bill was roughly $270. If I had Duke Energy, it would be even cheaper.

EDIT #2: My heat is natural gas, which is a separate bill.
 
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KeithTalent

Elite Member | Administrator | No Lifer
Administrator
Nov 30, 2005
50,231
118
116
Haven't checked recently, but historically, it's been ~1200 kWh in the winter months. Semi-detached 2400 sq.ft.-ish house (I included basement since it's heated).

Biggest spenders are probably water heater, furnace, and me. That 40" old LCD (not LED) TV and my ~150W computer system add up over a full day.

You with EnerCare? Seems way more expensive out here compared to what I used to pay to BC Hydro.

KT
 

disappoint

Lifer
Dec 7, 2009
10,132
382
126
1275kWh.

Speaking of which, I received a letter in the mail that they'll be installing smart meters in my neighborhood this month. That will be cool.

Oh so...What are you gettin smaht on me now?

stooges_a_l.jpg
 

MongGrel

Lifer
Dec 3, 2013
38,466
3,067
121
Got me, the wife does does finance.

Had to ask her, was $175, but everything down here runs off it, no gas or anything else, for about 2500 Sq Ft.

Have horrible Florida old windows in a few rooms need upgraded.

That and I hate below 75 degrees.
 
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Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
70,618
13,818
126
www.anyf.ca
r7Yt1nm.png


Detroit.

December is usually a bit higher for us due to holiday lights, etc. Our heat is gas so no impact there, but our water heater is electric so that ticks up a bit in the winter too.

Detroit still has electricity? Does the hydro company have armored vehicles for linemen to go do maintenance and repairs? :p
 

RockinZ28

Platinum Member
Mar 5, 2008
2,171
49
101
956.25 kWh. About 3500 sqft heated all electric home. Haven't received bill yet, should be around $150. First winter in a home, well outside of SoCal "winters". I had the thermostat at 67F for the first few days it started getting a little cold in November. Was using 60 kWh+ a day. That would result in $300+ bills. Turned it down to 55F and told the wife to put on a sweater.

16192546316_93430fa345_b.jpg
 

Belegost

Golden Member
Feb 20, 2001
1,807
19
81
956.25 kWh. About 3500 sqft heated all electric home. Haven't received bill yet, should be around $150. First winter in a home, well outside of SoCal "winters". I had the thermostat at 67F for the first few days it started getting a little cold in November. Was using 60 kWh+ a day. That would result in $300+ bills. Turned it down to 55F and told the wife to put on a sweater.

16192546316_93430fa345_b.jpg

I would be careful setting the thermostat too low with sub-freezing outdoor temps. If it's 55 on the inside of the walls and 20 outside, then within the walls will be a temperature gradient with some part below freezing. If that's a wall with water pipes you risk freezing.
 

tortillasoup

Golden Member
Jan 12, 2011
1,977
4
81
I would be careful setting the thermostat too low with sub-freezing outdoor temps. If it's 55 on the inside of the walls and 20 outside, then within the walls will be a temperature gradient with some part below freezing. If that's a wall with water pipes you risk freezing.

55f is nothing. I have a friend that owns a house in Lake Tahoe and he keeps the heat set to 55F to prevent the pipes from freezing. I don't even heat my house at all and it has historically gotten down to 48F inside, with the outside temperatures below freezing on some nights. 55F is way more than enough to ensure no burst pipes inside the house.
 

RockinZ28

Platinum Member
Mar 5, 2008
2,171
49
101
I would be careful setting the thermostat too low with sub-freezing outdoor temps. If it's 55 on the inside of the walls and 20 outside, then within the walls will be a temperature gradient with some part below freezing. If that's a wall with water pipes you risk freezing.

It should be good. Brand new house. All pipes are through the center, and I can see 90% of them in the unfinished part of the basement where the HVAC and water heater are. We'll see tomorrow, supposed to get down to -2F.
 

Sho'Nuff

Diamond Member
Jul 12, 2007
6,211
121
106
Holy moley. From what some of you are reporting it seems that I am buying some expensive electricity.
 

Sho'Nuff

Diamond Member
Jul 12, 2007
6,211
121
106
Could it be higher for you because previous bills were low estimates and they finally came out to do a corrective reading?

----
But for me, it's unknown because it's an included utility in my apartment.

Thought that might be the case. But I called the power company and they said they always do actual reads in my town now that everyone has a smart meter. Truck just drives by the house and gets the read. No need for someone to walk up to the home and read the meter anymore.
 

IndyColtsFan

Lifer
Sep 22, 2007
33,655
688
126
956.25 kWh. About 3500 sqft heated all electric home. Haven't received bill yet, should be around $150. First winter in a home, well outside of SoCal "winters". I had the thermostat at 67F for the first few days it started getting a little cold in November. Was using 60 kWh+ a day. That would result in $300+ bills. Turned it down to 55F and told the wife to put on a sweater.

16192546316_93430fa345_b.jpg

Do you get electricity from one of the REMC/cooperatives too? That is one thing I miss about Duke (used to be Cinergy in this area) -- electricity was significantly cheaper.
 

rcpratt

Lifer
Jul 2, 2009
10,433
110
116
Thought that might be the case. But I called the power company and they said they always do actual reads in my town now that everyone has a smart meter. Truck just drives by the house and gets the read. No need for someone to walk up to the home and read the meter anymore.
Did they really say that trucks are driving by your house? Because that is certainly not how our smart meters work around here.