Thursday, January 21, 2010

Home Desktop Computers How Much Electricity Does A Average Home Desktop Computer Use Per Hour?

How much electricity does a average home desktop computer use per hour? - home desktop computers

If ever the amount of electricity used per hour? What's new in the screensaver mode?

5 comments:

Zidane said...

Sorry! I talked to the units is the real answer!
Computer 350 ~ 500W

Screen 17 "TFT-25W for about one hour. A CRT of the same size is probably around 50W, but I'm not so sure.

With the computer, while energy consumption is based on the load, ie the quantity of the material inside and (to a lesser extent) mcuho how the work of the machinery there. 300W should be done with a reasonable number.

dze said...

1 answer is correct ... and the screen saver mode actually uses high performance from their video editing .... This is a screen saver is not a power saver ... Put the computer in hibernation or standby power saver ...

Inspecto... said...

The computer is not really used as much energy to give cause for concern, even if on the left side.

At a third level, very technical uses, energy, more than a standard halogen lamp of 300 watts.

Modern LCD monitors consume less power than their CRT, so there is no longer be saved. As stated Anothr providers who screen saver mode does nothing, except the exercise of the CPU, since LCDs do not need a screen saver (Screen saver were cathode ray tubes, avoiding the burning of the surface of the pad CRT)

and if you really want to minimize the use of his power to the computer's settings of the pattern hibernation personal use.

Michael w said...

for beginners, there are levels of LCD screens Althe wise, if you are not very important, its projection LCD

Philip T said...

Depending on the computer, but here are some examples:

After the tests in the framework of the IST, equipment, tests have been carried out as follows. On a Pentium 4, 1.7GH machine:

- Start During the wattage is about 110W
- At idle, no power management. Near 60W
- While the full energy savings without the hard drive, the machine is in standby mode, 35W

The total energy of a typical PC and monitor will not consume more than 175 watts of power at the highest level. At night, when the computer is "asleep", which consumes only 35 watts.

Source:
http://windows.uwaterloo.ca/Hardware/PC_ ...

Regards,
Philip T

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