Estimating
appliance and home electronic energy use
The gift-giving season is almost here and if you're trying
to decide whether to invest in a more energy-efficient appliance or you'd like
to determine how all those electrical gifts you will be getting for Christmas
will affect your electricity load, you may want to estimate appliance energy
consumption.
You can use this formula to estimate an appliance's energy use:
Wattage × Hours used per day × Days used per year ÷ 1000 =
Kilowatt-hour (kWh) consumption per year
For example:
Personal computer (120 Watts) and
monitor (150 Watts):
(120 Watts + 150 Watts) × 4
hours per day × 365 days per year ÷ 1000 = 394 kWh/year
Then, calculate the annual cost to run an appliance by multiplying the kWh
per year by your local utility's rate per kWh consumed.
394 kWh ×
$0.104 (current national average) = $40.98 per year
You can usually find the wattage of most appliances stamped on the bottom or
back of the appliance, or on its nameplate. The wattage listed is the maximum
power drawn by the appliance. Since many appliances have a range of settings
(hairdryers), the actual amount of power consumed depends on the setting used at
any one time.
Here are some examples of the range of nameplate wattages for various
household appliances:
- Clothes
washer = 350–500 Watts
- Clothes
dryer = 1800–5000 Watts
- Dishwasher
= 1200–2400 Watts (heat drying feature increases energy use)
- Hair
dryer = 1200–1875 Watts
- Microwave
oven = 750–1100 Watts
- Personal
computer
- CPU
- awake / asleep = 120 / 30 or less
- Monitor
- awake / asleep = 150 / 30 or less
- Laptop
= 50 Watts
- Refrigerator
(frost-free, 16 cubic feet) = 725 Watts
- Televisions
- 27"
= 113 Watts
- 36"
= 133 Watts
- 53"-61"
Projection = 170 Watts
- Flat
screen = 120 Watts
- Water
heater (40 gallon) = 4500–5500 Watts
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