Big BLU Sper Computer
Bill Horne
bill at horne.net
Mon Sep 6 12:06:00 EDT 2004
----- Original Message -----
From: "John Chambers" <jc at trillian.mit.edu>
[snip]
> OTOH, I'm not at all sure of the economics of such things. I don't
> really know how to accurately calculate the cost of running a
> machine. Yeah, the cost per KW-hour is just a number, but that
> doesn't make it easy to figure out the actual cost.
>
> Maybe I should get one of those gadgets that gives long-term data on
> how much power an appliance is using. Then I could figure out how
> much my current boxes actually cost to run. I wonder which of these
> meters gives useful data? There seems to be an order-of-magnitude
> range of prices, with somewhat vague descriptions of what they do.
John,
Here's the "upper limit" calculation. Keep in mind that it's a "worst case"
figure.
Take the power supply ratings from each machine, and add them together.
Then, divide by 1,000 to get kilowatts. Then, multiply by the number of
hours in a month (e.g., 720) to get kilowatt-hours. Finally, multiply kwh by
your provider's rate.
For example:
10 machines @ 250 watts each = 2500 watts
2500 watts divided by 1,000 = 2.5 kw
2.5 kw multiplied by 720 hours = 1800 kwh
1800 kwh multiplied by $0.06829/hwh = ~ $123 dollars/month.
That's the WORST CASE figure, and assumes you have the same rate I do. YMMV,
and obviously will.
Bill
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