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is it cheaper to use my electric at night ?
Hi , I have a question about my electricity ,
My provider for this is British Gas ,
I have been told that it is cheaper to put the washing machine on at midnight 12 - 6 am, because it costs alot less , and that you can buy plugs that time it .
any advice on this much appreciated .
My provider for this is British Gas ,
I have been told that it is cheaper to put the washing machine on at midnight 12 - 6 am, because it costs alot less , and that you can buy plugs that time it .
any advice on this much appreciated .
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Comments
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It is as long as you have an economy 7 tarrif (your meter will have 2 or more readings on it)
If you are, off-peak times also vary by region - so avoid the start or end of these periods (as your washing machine isn't going to take 6 hours per cycle)
If you are on an off peak tarrif, the best thing to do is phone and ask exactly when the off-peak times are in your supply region for your supply type.
Timings also depend to an extend on if you have a teleswitch (that receives it's command over LW radio) or a mechanical timer by your meter to switch to off-peak rate - if it is a teleswitch timings will be very close to what are given by your supplier, if a mechanical timeswitch this could well have "drifted" so don't take the times given my your supplier as set-in-stone in this case!
HTH
MPI have a poll / discussion on Economy 7 / 10 off-peak usage (as a % or total) and ways to improve it but I'm not allowed to link to it so have a look on the gas/elec forum if you would like to vote or discuss.:cool:
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I have been told that it is cheaper to put the washing machine on at midnight 12 - 6 am, because it costs alot less , and that you can buy plugs that time it .
any advice on this much appreciated .
Be careful about trying to switch on an appliance using a timer plug. The older machines with an electro mechanical programmer/timer (the dial turned as the programme ran) were OK. A lot of the more modern ones require power to be on, for the "on" button to work - if you see what I mean ! so you cannot start them with an external timer.
The slightly more expensive modern machines have a "start in x hrs" button which overcomes the problem.0 -
moonrakerz wrote: »A lot of the more modern ones require power to be on, for the "on" button to work - if you see what I mean ! so you cannot start them with an external timer.
The slightly more expensive modern machines have a "start in x hrs" button which overcomes the problem.
An excellent point!I have a poll / discussion on Economy 7 / 10 off-peak usage (as a % or total) and ways to improve it but I'm not allowed to link to it so have a look on the gas/elec forum if you would like to vote or discuss.:cool:
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I would be very wary of switching it on when you are in bed, it is a LONG time flooding if leaking, until you get up for breakfast.
A neighbour of mine had £15,000 worth of damage when hers leaked whilst she was out at work.0
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