Lowering electricity costs?
Discussion
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Hahn
fasimew said:
Currently there is no premesis to speak of, other than my garage. There will be no load shedding or off peak hours.
I have worked on a 4MW solar installation, where a PPA contract was used. This meant that a DNO bought the power produced for a length of time at a specified rate. I don't know if such an agreement can be had as a consumer?
I have a meeting pencilled in with a renewable energy expert to discuss ideas. A suggestion that's been made is to sell the heat produced to offset the consumption.
On a serious note, have a look at https://rippleenergy.com/business/ripple-for-busin...I have worked on a 4MW solar installation, where a PPA contract was used. This meant that a DNO bought the power produced for a length of time at a specified rate. I don't know if such an agreement can be had as a consumer?
I have a meeting pencilled in with a renewable energy expert to discuss ideas. A suggestion that's been made is to sell the heat produced to offset the consumption.
Edited by fasimew on Wednesday 17th April 17:41
Frimley111R said:
Voltage Optimiser - reduces electricity costs by around 10%.
Local REC can and will supply voltage within their described limits. You might already be at the lower end of the scale, you might be at the high end. These units can work but do very little in the real world. Have had experience of them commercially. 200Plus Club said:
Frimley111R said:
Voltage Optimiser - reduces electricity costs by around 10%.
Local REC can and will supply voltage within their described limits. You might already be at the lower end of the scale, you might be at the high end. These units can work but do very little in the real world. Have had experience of them commercially. I do agree that they seem like snake oil but in reality, what they do is very simple and if companies ranging from British Steel to Halford, Betfred and huge range of other big companies have them, well...
It's worth getting a quick quote from GWE, you have nothing to lose.
Frimley111R said:
They can't if it affects other locations on the same supply.
I do agree that they seem like snake oil but in reality, what they do is very simple and if companies ranging from British Steel to Halford, Betfred and huge range of other big companies have them, well...
It's worth getting a quick quote from GWE, you have nothing to lose.
You can also alter your hv transformer tappings on your own site free of charge, trust me I've done it on big sites !I do agree that they seem like snake oil but in reality, what they do is very simple and if companies ranging from British Steel to Halford, Betfred and huge range of other big companies have them, well...
It's worth getting a quick quote from GWE, you have nothing to lose.
iguana said:
fasimew said:
Wow. Why is there such a gap?
No price cap on commercial & in our case the landlord provides the infrastructure & adds on a tad.Frimley111R said:
200Plus Club said:
Frimley111R said:
Voltage Optimiser - reduces electricity costs by around 10%.
Local REC can and will supply voltage within their described limits. You might already be at the lower end of the scale, you might be at the high end. These units can work but do very little in the real world. Have had experience of them commercially. I do agree that they seem like snake oil but in reality, what they do is very simple and if companies ranging from British Steel to Halford, Betfred and huge range of other big companies have them, well...
It's worth getting a quick quote from GWE, you have nothing to lose.
However, they can also render equipment inoperable, a lot of modern electrical equipment have a form internal VO in them anyway.
Depends what is being run in the first place.
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