An energy efficient kettle for less than £50.
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donnajunkie wrote: »So there is no point in replacing the current cheapo asda brand kettle?
You can make gains with smaller minimum fills , better insulation, quicker cutoffs etc - but reading your posts I dont think you will ever get the improvements you believe possible0 -
donnajunkie wrote: »So there is no point in replacing the current cheapo asda brand kettle?
Replacing it won't give you a more 'energy efficient' kettle for the reasons given earlier in this thread.
A full (1 litre) kettle costs about 2.5p to boil (far less if you're only boiling enough for one cup of tea or coffee), so you'd need to be boiling an awful lot of kettles to make any real impact on your electricity bill. I presume you've ensured you are with one of the better (i.e. cheaper) electricity suppliers?0 -
Replacing it won't give you a more 'energy efficient' kettle for the reasons given earlier in this thread.
A full (1 litre) kettle costs about 2.5p to boil (far less if you're only boiling enough for one cup of tea or coffee), so you'd need to be boiling an awful lot of kettles to make any real impact on your electricity bill. I presume you've ensured you are with one of the better (i.e. cheaper) electricity suppliers?
On the display that came with the smart meter the bar goes up depending on how much is being used. Low is green, then orange then red. When boiling a kettle it flies up into the orange section which is quite high. Just thought a better quality kettle might get that down a bit. Then again i don't know how much i can trust the display gadget because it is saying our daily usage is more than double what it used to be. At the same time a recent meter read kept payments as they were.0 -
donnajunkie wrote: »On the display that came with the smart meter the bar goes up depending on how much is being used. Low is green, then orange then red. When boiling a kettle it flies up into the orange section which is quite high. Just thought a better quality kettle might get that down a bit. Then again i don't know how much i can trust the display gadget because it is saying our daily usage is more than double what it used to be. At the same time a recent meter read kept payments as they were.
Kettles don't vary much in quality, just in wattage. A 'rapid boil' kettle will send your smart meter hurtling into the orange or red zone - but for a much shorter time than its lower wattage, non-rapid boil cousin. In other words, the amount of electricity used will be the same overall by the time your kettle has boiled.
Smart meters have limitations, particularly if the green/orange/red reading is interpreted simply as good/not so good/bad.0
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