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Are there any cheaper gadgets avaliable, which can monitor electricty useage per room in a shared house, other than expensive meters from the utility provider?
Over the Winter time period, some tenants use lots more/less than others , but cannot reconcile the charges amongst themselves. How is the most equitable apportionment possible of the electricity bill?

2006-12-24 08:16:12 · 7 answers · asked by jsghatahora 2 in Home & Garden Other - Home & Garden

7 answers

yup the others are right.. fair way is to divide it... but. you should sit down and spell it out.. no large use appliances in the room.. no space heaters or refrigerators. if they want to use them they can pay an xtra fee on top of the divided cost..
you can get a rough figure of monthly cost of a space heater (which im guessing your having troubles with)

To figure out Watts from Amps, you must multiply the amps x volts, in the US, that's usually 120 or 240 for heavy duty appliances. For example, 1.2 Amps x 120 Volts is 144 Watts. Next, divide that number by 1000 to figure out Kilowatt hours. 144/1000 is .144. A Kilowatt hour is 1,000 Watts of electricity used for one hour. Next multiply the Kilowatt hours by hours (24 if used all day) then 365 (days in year). Then multiply that figure by whatever your power company charges you for a kilowatt hour. (Refer to your electric bill) Let's say your power company charges you $.075/kwh. The cost then to run that 1.2 Amp appliance over one year, not stop would be .144 x 24 x 365 x .075 or $94.60.

i would divide that cost to get the xtra fee they have to pay and bite the bullet on the rest (but figure your fee a lil higher)

2006-12-24 08:31:29 · answer #1 · answered by hometech02 3 · 2 1

There are power consumption meters that are available but are fairly pricy. I would think the main issue is not the availability of the device but how you would install it. There are typically at least 2 electrical circuits in each bedroom and each circuit covers several rooms. For example, the lighting circuit in all of the bedrooms may be in the same circuit but the wall plugs may be split among several circuits. That means you need several of these meters and it just becomes to expensive to buy the meters.

There are also fairly simple power meters that can be plugged into a wall recepticle. Take a look at www.mcmaster.com and item number 6395K12. These can only monitor one recepticle at a time and cost $150 each. You also need to be good with a computer to interface the software and device.

I don't think it's really worth all this trouble. Just split it.

2006-12-24 08:46:02 · answer #2 · answered by my2cents 3 · 1 0

The way I always did it was having each tenant pay an equal share. For instance, if the bill came to $300 and there were 3 people, each pays $100. Or, one could pay the whole thing and charge the others rent for living there.

2006-12-24 08:22:54 · answer #3 · answered by hillbilly 7 · 0 0

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2016-10-05 23:44:04 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Divide. Happy Holidays!

2006-12-24 08:23:31 · answer #5 · answered by Hales 2 · 0 0

Divide it by the number of people. It would be impossible to tell who uses exactly the most of the utilities.

If you have a couple they would pay double that of an individual.

Everyone benefits equally from the utilities.

2006-12-24 08:20:55 · answer #6 · answered by ? 7 · 0 0

You should equally divide between the tenants

2006-12-24 08:25:05 · answer #7 · answered by ejaz f 1 · 0 0

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