fidelcastro
Registered User
- Messages
- 320
No, its old inaccurate piece of historical metering of 20th century, belonging in a museum. Same as for the EIR POTS network.Is my existing meter not good enough? Is that what the ESB are saying?
That also applies to water metersThis is the company contracted to do work for the telecomms companies. Because they do "line-work" for eircom, they are the goto installers for indoor work as well.
The existing analogue meters were also tested, approved and calibrated as accurate when they were installed. Has anyone ever heard of the existing meters being recalibrated? Presumably, like all mechanical, electro-mechanical devices there will be subject to wear over time.
You obviously need Electrical safety certification for ESB distribution work.That also applies to water meters
Hopefully the new government will put these meters to the test by introducing water charges.That also applies to water meters
Re : Have To , you should be happy to move to 21st metering, like rest of advanced world, with its higher accuracy metering,.I might be building a new porch and was going to get my meter moved outside so will i have a choice or will i have to have a smart meter
The door of my external meter has come off with the last wind. It's taped up at the moment. Do these new meters come with new boxes or doors. Trying to Google photos it's not clear does it replace the box entirely . I have to get some other electrical work done so if it is just going to be replaced in next few months I'll live with it. If not any idea how much to replace the box . This is the 3rd door and keeps coming off.
Do these new meters come with new boxes or doors.
Definitely will not be replacing boxes as part of the smart meter rollout.
But in the UK, it seems that SSE have had a great idea about a new potential use for smart meters
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/09/19/critics-smart-meters-right-along2/
Food for thought for me.
PaywallEd...
That's a much better article, the Telegraph one is a bit hysterical. I'd love to see an offical document where it was suggested that heatpumps were one of the appliances that could be turned off. Apart from the fact that people die every year being in homes that are too cold, so the chances of an energy company making that call is zero, heatpumps generally draw ~1kW power, it would make no sense to be turning those off when there are cars up the road pulling down 7kW.If you register, I think you can get 3 articles free/week. Same story here
https://www.fleetnews.co.uk/news/la...ehicle-home-charging-switch-off-a-last-resort
not paywalled. The DT article expands the theory that there will be huge mismatches between demand and supply capacity and speculates that mission creep may extend the circumstances/time periods that smart meters could be used to ration power use.
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