Re: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

2009-10-05 Thread Mike Morris WA6ILQ
At 06:34 PM 10/04/09, you wrote:
I have one that I use every once in a while.  It works well at 
determining the power usage of a repeater at a site.  I don't want 
to give mine away, but I would lend it out to you.  I will want it 
back, though.  It weighs about 15 pounds, so shipping and the 
eventual return shipment may be more than he wants to spend.

I appreciate the loan offer, both from you and from
several others, but I think that he (or I) will want it
around for making measurements in the future.

I found mine at the dump.  It is a 120VAC 15 Ampere, 60 cycle, 
2-wire unit.  I even got the box with it, and I put an AC cord and 
plug on the box.  This evidently came off one of the old summer 
homes that are around the local lakes of Connecticut.  Many of these 
summer homes were very small and sparse, no heat not running water, 
from the 1920's and up in time.  Electricity was a luxury and they 
did have 15 Amp services.

That's exactly what we need - a four-wire meter (120V in, neutral in,
120V out, neutral out) at anywhere from 15 to 60 amps.  And I've seen
one that looked like it had three wires (in out and neutral), but I never
saw it in operation.

Maybe a local electrician around your area may have run into 
something similar out where you are?

This request came in saturday morning, I spent all day
saturday on a deployment, and not many electricians
are in their offices / shops on a sunday...  I'll ask around
during the week.

73, Joe, K1ike

Mike WA6ILQ




Re: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

2009-10-05 Thread Thomas Oliver
I bought some off ebay a couple years ago I think this is the same guy.

I have $25.00 into mine so it would be cheeper to get yours directly from
him.

tom

http://cgi.ebay.com/single-GE-I70-meter-watthour-watt-electric-utility_W0QQi
temZ250505742954QQcmdZViewItemQQptZBI_Electrical_Equipment_Tools?hash=item3a
534e4a6a_trksid=p3286.c0.m14


 [Original Message]
 From: Mike Morris WA6ILQ wa6...@gmail.com
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 Date: 10/5/2009 3:17:23 AM
 Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

 At 06:34 PM 10/04/09, you wrote:
 I have one that I use every once in a while.  It works well at 
 determining the power usage of a repeater at a site.  I don't want 
 to give mine away, but I would lend it out to you.  I will want it 
 back, though.  It weighs about 15 pounds, so shipping and the 
 eventual return shipment may be more than he wants to spend.

 I appreciate the loan offer, both from you and from
 several others, but I think that he (or I) will want it
 around for making measurements in the future.

 I found mine at the dump.  It is a 120VAC 15 Ampere, 60 cycle, 
 2-wire unit.  I even got the box with it, and I put an AC cord and 
 plug on the box.  This evidently came off one of the old summer 
 homes that are around the local lakes of Connecticut.  Many of these 
 summer homes were very small and sparse, no heat not running water, 
 from the 1920's and up in time.  Electricity was a luxury and they 
 did have 15 Amp services.

 That's exactly what we need - a four-wire meter (120V in, neutral in,
 120V out, neutral out) at anywhere from 15 to 60 amps.  And I've seen
 one that looked like it had three wires (in out and neutral), but I never
 saw it in operation.

 Maybe a local electrician around your area may have run into 
 something similar out where you are?

 This request came in saturday morning, I spent all day
 saturday on a deployment, and not many electricians
 are in their offices / shops on a sunday...  I'll ask around
 during the week.

 73, Joe, K1ike

 Mike WA6ILQ




 



 Yahoo! Groups Links






Re: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

2009-10-05 Thread WD7F - John in Tucson
Go buy yourself a Kill-A-Watt...less than $30.  Has several modes, e.g., 
voltage, frequency, average power, peak power,etc. and works great for the 
price.
de WD7F
John in Tucson

- Original Message - 
From: Thomas Oliver tsoli...@tir.com
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, October 05, 2009 7:31 AM
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...


I bought some off ebay a couple years ago I think this is the same guy.

 I have $25.00 into mine so it would be cheeper to get yours directly from
 him.

 tom

 http://cgi.ebay.com/single-GE-I70-meter-watthour-watt-electric-utility_W0QQi
 temZ250505742954QQcmdZViewItemQQptZBI_Electrical_Equipment_Tools?hash=item3a
 534e4a6a_trksid=p3286.c0.m14


 [Original Message]
 From: Mike Morris WA6ILQ wa6...@gmail.com
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 Date: 10/5/2009 3:17:23 AM
 Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

 At 06:34 PM 10/04/09, you wrote:
 I have one that I use every once in a while.  It works well at
 determining the power usage of a repeater at a site.  I don't want
 to give mine away, but I would lend it out to you.  I will want it
 back, though.  It weighs about 15 pounds, so shipping and the
 eventual return shipment may be more than he wants to spend.

 I appreciate the loan offer, both from you and from
 several others, but I think that he (or I) will want it
 around for making measurements in the future.

 I found mine at the dump.  It is a 120VAC 15 Ampere, 60 cycle,
 2-wire unit.  I even got the box with it, and I put an AC cord and
 plug on the box.  This evidently came off one of the old summer
 homes that are around the local lakes of Connecticut.  Many of these
 summer homes were very small and sparse, no heat not running water,
 from the 1920's and up in time.  Electricity was a luxury and they
 did have 15 Amp services.

 That's exactly what we need - a four-wire meter (120V in, neutral in,
 120V out, neutral out) at anywhere from 15 to 60 amps.  And I've seen
 one that looked like it had three wires (in out and neutral), but I never
 saw it in operation.

 Maybe a local electrician around your area may have run into
 something similar out where you are?

 This request came in saturday morning, I spent all day
 saturday on a deployment, and not many electricians
 are in their offices / shops on a sunday...  I'll ask around
 during the week.

 73, Joe, K1ike

 Mike WA6ILQ




 



 Yahoo! Groups Links






 



 Yahoo! Groups Links









No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 8.5.409 / Virus Database: 270.14.3/2414 - Release Date: 10/04/09 
18:42:00



RE: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

2009-10-05 Thread Doug Rehman
P3 Kill A Watt Electricity Load Meter and Monitor $19 from Newegg:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16882715001 

 

Free Shipping after Coupon Code: EMCLXNX64 (Exp 10/5).

 

Doug

K4AC

 

From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of WD7F - John in Tucson
Sent: Monday, October 05, 2009 10:52 AM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

 

  

Go buy yourself a Kill-A-Watt...less than $30. Has several modes, e.g., 
voltage, frequency, average power, peak power,etc. and works great for the 
price.
de WD7F
John in Tucson





Re: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

2009-10-05 Thread Chuck Kelsey
The original post indicated that the guy already has one of these meters.

Chuck
WB2EDV



  - Original Message - 
  From: Doug Rehman 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Monday, October 05, 2009 11:08 AM
  Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...





  P3 Kill A Watt Electricity Load Meter and Monitor $19 from Newegg: 
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16882715001 

   

  Free Shipping after Coupon Code: EMCLXNX64 (Exp 10/5).

   

  Doug

  K4AC

   

  From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of WD7F - John in Tucson
  Sent: Monday, October 05, 2009 10:52 AM
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
  Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

   



  Go buy yourself a Kill-A-Watt...less than $30. Has several modes, e.g., 
  voltage, frequency, average power, peak power,etc. and works great for the 
  price.
  de WD7F
  John in Tucson






  

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

2009-10-05 Thread DCFluX
Hey, It is good enough for the Mythbusters

On Mon, Oct 5, 2009 at 8:14 AM, Chuck Kelsey wb2...@roadrunner.com wrote:



 The original post indicated that the guy already has one of these meters.

 Chuck
 WB2EDV




 - Original Message -
 *From:* Doug Rehman d...@k4ac.com
 *To:* Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 *Sent:* Monday, October 05, 2009 11:08 AM
 *Subject:* RE: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

  P3 Kill A Watt Electricity Load Meter and Monitor $19 from Newegg:
 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16882715001



 *Free Shipping* after Coupon Code: *EMCLXNX64* (Exp 10/5).



 Doug

 K4AC



 *From:* Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com [mailto:
 repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] *On Behalf Of *WD7F - John in Tucson
 *Sent:* Monday, October 05, 2009 10:52 AM
 *To:* Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 *Subject:* Re: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...





 Go buy yourself a Kill-A-Watt...less than $30. Has several modes, e.g.,
 voltage, frequency, average power, peak power,etc. and works great for the
 price.
 de WD7F
 John in Tucson



 



[Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

2009-10-04 Thread Mike Morris WA6ILQ
A ham I know is doing some research and needs to
locate a spinning disk KWH meter, with socket, cheap
or free...

If he turns up something interesting it will end up as a 
repeater-builder article.

He wrote:

 My concern is that the cabinet I had here last year measured at idle
 1.5 amps at 120V (180VA) yet also only measured 43 Watts with
 the Kill-A-Watt meter. I am looking for another device to tell me what
 the electric company is actually seeing and billing.  Might one of your
 connections have an extra single phase KWH meter in the junk box?

I suspect he has a situation involving power factor.


Mike WA6ILQ



RE: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

2009-10-04 Thread Eric Lemmon
Yeah, that is a big issue with those big and heavy ferroresonant power
supplies from GE and Motorola.  At low loads, they are incredibly
inefficient, with very low power factors- meaning the volt-amperes are much
higher than the watts.  Proof of this statement is found in the Files
section of this group, in my Power Supply Load Test folder.

You pay for electric energy in kilowatt-hours, kWh, not for volt-amperes.
Regardless of what the ammeter reads, the Kill-A-Watt reading of 43 watts is
what counts.  If we assume that the repeater sits idle for 24 hours and
consumes 43 watts, that is 1.032 kWh per day- probably 15 cents worth.  I
have one of those Kill-A-Watt meters, as well as some spinning-disk meters,
and they agree very closely.

Electricity suppliers don't like low power factors, because even though the
power consumption may be low, the utility must build their infrastructure to
supply those reactive amperes, meaning bigger generators, transformers, and
power lines.  Large industrial customers are often penalized for low power
factor, to help pay for the additional capital equipment that must be
installed to supply reactive amperes.  That's why new commercial gear is
using power-factor-corrected switchmode power supplies.  The definition of
high power factor varies, but most utilities want PF to be above 0.9.

It should be emphasized that one cannot determine power consumed (watts) by
separately measuring volts and amps.  Separate measurements result in
volt-amperes, which is also called apparent power.  To measure true power,
one must use a wattmeter.  A mechanical wattmeter is called an
electrodynamometer, and is a meter that has two coils- instead of one coil
and a permanent magnet.  One coil is connected in parallel with the load,
and is energized by voltage.  The other coil is much heavier and is
connected in series with the load, and is energized by current.  The torque
on the meter movement is the instantaneous sum of voltage and current in
phase, result in a deflection indicative of power.  An electronic wattmeter
uses a circuit element known as a four-quadrant multiplier, meaning that the
comparison of voltage and current is continuous through 360 degrees.  I have
just such an instrument, a WD-767 digital wattmeter made by VIZ.  It can
display true-RMS volts, true-RMS current, and true power in watts.  Very
handy!

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY


-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Mike Morris WA6ILQ
Sent: Sunday, October 04, 2009 6:10 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

  

A ham I know is doing some research and needs to
locate a spinning disk KWH meter, with socket, cheap
or free...

If he turns up something interesting it will end up as a 
repeater-builder article.

He wrote:

My concern is that the cabinet I had here last year measured at idle
1.5 amps at 120V (180VA) yet also only measured 43 Watts with
the Kill-A-Watt meter. I am looking for another device to tell me what
the electric company is actually seeing and billing. Might one of your
connections have an extra single phase KWH meter in the junk box?

I suspect he has a situation involving power factor.

Mike WA6ILQ







Re: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...

2009-10-04 Thread DCFluX
There is a device called a Kill a watt, that is a plug in kWh meter,
should be avalible at big hardware stores.

http://www.killawattplus.com

On Sun, Oct 4, 2009 at 6:57 PM, Eric Lemmon wb6...@verizon.net wrote:
 Yeah, that is a big issue with those big and heavy ferroresonant power
 supplies from GE and Motorola.  At low loads, they are incredibly
 inefficient, with very low power factors- meaning the volt-amperes are much
 higher than the watts.  Proof of this statement is found in the Files
 section of this group, in my Power Supply Load Test folder.

 You pay for electric energy in kilowatt-hours, kWh, not for volt-amperes.
 Regardless of what the ammeter reads, the Kill-A-Watt reading of 43 watts is
 what counts.  If we assume that the repeater sits idle for 24 hours and
 consumes 43 watts, that is 1.032 kWh per day- probably 15 cents worth.  I
 have one of those Kill-A-Watt meters, as well as some spinning-disk meters,
 and they agree very closely.

 Electricity suppliers don't like low power factors, because even though the
 power consumption may be low, the utility must build their infrastructure to
 supply those reactive amperes, meaning bigger generators, transformers, and
 power lines.  Large industrial customers are often penalized for low power
 factor, to help pay for the additional capital equipment that must be
 installed to supply reactive amperes.  That's why new commercial gear is
 using power-factor-corrected switchmode power supplies.  The definition of
 high power factor varies, but most utilities want PF to be above 0.9.

 It should be emphasized that one cannot determine power consumed (watts) by
 separately measuring volts and amps.  Separate measurements result in
 volt-amperes, which is also called apparent power.  To measure true power,
 one must use a wattmeter.  A mechanical wattmeter is called an
 electrodynamometer, and is a meter that has two coils- instead of one coil
 and a permanent magnet.  One coil is connected in parallel with the load,
 and is energized by voltage.  The other coil is much heavier and is
 connected in series with the load, and is energized by current.  The torque
 on the meter movement is the instantaneous sum of voltage and current in
 phase, result in a deflection indicative of power.  An electronic wattmeter
 uses a circuit element known as a four-quadrant multiplier, meaning that the
 comparison of voltage and current is continuous through 360 degrees.  I have
 just such an instrument, a WD-767 digital wattmeter made by VIZ.  It can
 display true-RMS volts, true-RMS current, and true power in watts.  Very
 handy!

 73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY


 -Original Message-
 From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 [mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Mike Morris WA6ILQ
 Sent: Sunday, October 04, 2009 6:10 PM
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Spinning disk wattmeter...



 A ham I know is doing some research and needs to
 locate a spinning disk KWH meter, with socket, cheap
 or free...

 If he turns up something interesting it will end up as a
 repeater-builder article.

 He wrote:

My concern is that the cabinet I had here last year measured at idle
1.5 amps at 120V (180VA) yet also only measured 43 Watts with
the Kill-A-Watt meter. I am looking for another device to tell me what
the electric company is actually seeing and billing. Might one of your
connections have an extra single phase KWH meter in the junk box?

 I suspect he has a situation involving power factor.

 Mike WA6ILQ







 



 Yahoo! Groups Links