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Jaxson: 2x dehumidifiers is probably not a good start there.
merlinz: This review of the 3D model of the same vintage (VT20) claims to have measured actual consumption - reported as 1W but they are rounding power to nearest integer so I think that just means something between 0 and 1W. Their reviews are unusually thorough. I see no reason why standby current would be different between 3D and 2D models.
Not wanting to stir up another hornet's nest, but I did hook my (fairly cheap, ostensibly true RMS) DMM up to my GT30Z and it showed 99mA = 23W. But I simply don't believe it, I think both it and the Elto are being fooled by the (presumably) inductive load of a relay and have no ability to deal with the true power factor at this level. I would actually trust Panasonic far more.
merlinz: Not wanting to stir up another hornet's nest, but I did hook my (fairly cheap, ostensibly true RMS) DMM up to my GT30Z and it showed 99mA = 23W. But I simply don't believe it, I think both it and the Elto are being fooled by the (presumably) inductive load of a relay and have no ability to deal with the true power factor at this level.
Skolink:merlinz: Not wanting to stir up another hornet's nest, but I did hook my (fairly cheap, ostensibly true RMS) DMM up to my GT30Z and it showed 99mA = 23W. But I simply don't believe it, I think both it and the Elto are being fooled by the (presumably) inductive load of a relay and have no ability to deal with the true power factor at this level.
It's probably not inductive load that's the problem, but 'non-linear' loads that do not draw sinusoidal current (whether in phase or out of phase with the voltage).
A rectifier will typically draw a pulse or spike of current only at the peak of the voltage waveform, worse (sharper spike) when lightly loaded (say when a device is in standby). A cheap meter might measure the peak and assume it represented the level of sinusoidal current draw.
My $20 plug-in meter does display power factor, so I would trust it on an AC motor, but I'm not so trusting when it comes to electronics or small loads.
merlinz:Skolink:merlinz: Not wanting to stir up another hornet's nest, but I did hook my (fairly cheap, ostensibly true RMS) DMM up to my GT30Z and it showed 99mA = 23W. But I simply don't believe it, I think both it and the Elto are being fooled by the (presumably) inductive load of a relay and have no ability to deal with the true power factor at this level.
It's probably not inductive load that's the problem, but 'non-linear' loads that do not draw sinusoidal current (whether in phase or out of phase with the voltage).
A rectifier will typically draw a pulse or spike of current only at the peak of the voltage waveform, worse (sharper spike) when lightly loaded (say when a device is in standby). A cheap meter might measure the peak and assume it represented the level of sinusoidal current draw.
My $20 plug-in meter does display power factor, so I would trust it on an AC motor, but I'm not so trusting when it comes to electronics or small loads.
I confess I realised straight after posting that was rather shallow thinking about the relay, and I was half expecting to be corrected. Good explanation, thanks.
xarqi: Nope. It wasn't that. There was a drop in current a short time after turning off, coinciding with a relay click, but the current draw after that was anomalously high. In the end I decided that the issue was probably instrumentation, and that it really wasn't worth the effort of pursuing.
xarqi: Nope. It wasn't that. There was a drop in current a short time after turning off, coinciding with a relay click, but the current draw after that was anomalously high. In the end I decided that the issue was probably instrumentation, and that it really wasn't worth the effort of pursuing.
kiwitrc:xarqi: Nope. It wasn't that. There was a drop in current a short time after turning off, coinciding with a relay click, but the current draw after that was anomalously high. In the end I decided that the issue was probably instrumentation, and that it really wasn't worth the effort of pursuing.
PM me if you like as I can check your meter against a calibrated standard.
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