I'm a bit late into this thread, but I built my own from a kit available here in Australia. It's a design from a local magazine called Silicon Chip, and retails through a few places, like DSE & Altronics (www.altronics.com.au)
http://www.dse.com.au/cgi-bin/dse.storefront/44e509be0969bde4273fc0a87f9c0731/Product/View/K7217

It's an expensive kit though and you need to fo through a calibration setup where you put a purely resistive high load on (so that the PF=1.0, I used a domestic fanless heater). It's easy enough, but if you're not experienced it is a potentially dangerous exercise. You can buy cheaper killawatt type of devices, but I don't know how good they are in comparison this this unit I built. Powerfactors must be taken into account and I believe some of the real cheap units may not be accurate with inductive/capacitive loads. Switch mode power supplies are also notoriously difficult to accurately measure - but near enough might be good enough for most people.

There's a cheap unit which I'm going to buy from Jaycar to compare to my kit, but this will have Australian pins on it since it's a wallbug one like Killawatt. The kit I built was good this way - you just bought a short extension lead and cut it in half to use as male & female for your country.
http://www.jaycar.com.au/productView.asp?ID=MS6115&CATID=&keywords=power+meter&SPECIAL=&form=KEYWORD&ProdCodeOnly=&Keyword1=&Keyword2=&pageNumber=&priceMin=&priceMax=&SUBCATID=

As a matter of interest, I have a 2.6GHz P4 (not HT) with 3 HDD's in it, and the PC alone consumes around 90W while idle, with no HDD access, 2 of the 3 drives are in standby too. Compare this 90W to my windows box which is a P4 3.2GHz machine with a Radeon 9800 Pro video card - this machine consumes 170-180W idling, and almost 300W while playing a game (ie. CPU & GPU loaded).

Also, my TV/DVD player/amplifier/VCR combination consumes 30W when everything is 'off', and only 100W when it's all going. So these days I turn my whole setup off overnight and most of the day until I actually use them in the evenings.....so if my system is off for 10 hours, it effectively means that I've saved 300Wh, which can run my system for 3 hours (more than I actually watch per day!) Sure, it costs cents to run, but in a quarterly bill you do actually see the difference, plus every kWh creates around 0.6kg of emissions (US average, I don't have figures for my own country)







Ow Mun Heng wrote:
Hi Guys,

I know this is VERY OT. I have a Gentoo Server running at Home 24/7 and
there's a possiblity that it's really eating up my energy bill.

I've seen the Kill-A-Watt
http://www.thinkgeek.com/gadgets/electronic/7657/ but it's a 120V US
Version.

I'm looking for a 240V Version. Would anyone here know where to get one?

The Server is an old DELL PowerEdge 4300 w/ 2x350Mhz Procs and 1GB Mem



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