I was wondering if anyone else has done this with a typical home PC.
I was doing some testing to see what uses the most power in my home (need to save money during expensive winter months). I decided to check my computer since I use it a lot. I was actually considering moving to a flat panel display until I did this.
I used a variac with a built in amp meter, and was surprised to see my computer uses less than 2 amps at idle. I was expecting at least 5-8 amps. Basic system specs-
Vantec Stealth 520W power supply
AMD Athlon 64 3700+
1GB RAM
4 hard drives
DVD-ROM
DVD-RW
Soundblaster Audigy Platinum
21" Sun trinitron monitor
Altec Lansing ACS56 speakers
A couple small USB devices
The monitor states 4 Amps on the tag, and the power supply on the computer states 10 Amps. These must be peak cold-boot values. If everything on my PC was using the actual current that was listed on each device, it would be equal to an average electric heater
I already changed out my light bulbs to the small flourescent ones, got new windows, HVAC, insulation, etc., but I'd still like to keep costs as low as possible. It's mainly the cost of the natural gas that's killing me. At least I know my computer is not the power hungry beast I thought it was.
Maybe I'll re-test using my digital multimeter in case the analog meter on the variac is not accurate.
I was doing some testing to see what uses the most power in my home (need to save money during expensive winter months). I decided to check my computer since I use it a lot. I was actually considering moving to a flat panel display until I did this.
I used a variac with a built in amp meter, and was surprised to see my computer uses less than 2 amps at idle. I was expecting at least 5-8 amps. Basic system specs-
Vantec Stealth 520W power supply
AMD Athlon 64 3700+
1GB RAM
4 hard drives
DVD-ROM
DVD-RW
Soundblaster Audigy Platinum
21" Sun trinitron monitor
Altec Lansing ACS56 speakers
A couple small USB devices
The monitor states 4 Amps on the tag, and the power supply on the computer states 10 Amps. These must be peak cold-boot values. If everything on my PC was using the actual current that was listed on each device, it would be equal to an average electric heater

I already changed out my light bulbs to the small flourescent ones, got new windows, HVAC, insulation, etc., but I'd still like to keep costs as low as possible. It's mainly the cost of the natural gas that's killing me. At least I know my computer is not the power hungry beast I thought it was.
Maybe I'll re-test using my digital multimeter in case the analog meter on the variac is not accurate.
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