Keezer Power Usage?

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benno1973

Beer Idiot
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As with any large expense I make on brewing, I need to provide a pretty good business case to my wife.

Nearly 3 years ago I bought a small barfridge sized kegerator, based on the fact that I was able to show that it used less power than my old clunker Kelvinator fridge.

Unfortunately I didn't have much foresight at the time, and I now regret not being able to have more than 2 taps on the go at once. As such, I'm now looking at upgrading to a freezer with a collar, which will hopefully be able to hold at least 4-6 kegs.

I can do the business case for the money side of things (buy a cheap second hand freezer and sell my kegerator), but I know she's going to ask about power consumption, and I need to be prepared. So....

Is there anyone out there who owns a power meter (like one of these) and a keezer who'd be willing to plug it in and measure the power consumption for a few days? All I'd need to know would be:

1. Kilowatts consumed
2. Number of hours
3. City (for some max/min temperature stats)
4. Freezer size and/or model

Obviously there's a whole bunch of variables that aren't being taken into account by this experiment (like ambient temperatures and so on), but if I can show that keezers aren't that power hungry, it'll be easier for me to sell this.

Anyway, here's hoping someone can help me out?
 
Just out of interest I placed a similar meter on the fridge/freezer units I have here. It was during the recent Perth heat wave so some nice warm weather and the units had plenty of use... doors opening and closing, cold beer out, warm beer swapped in. Afraid I only have the $ value. Keg King kegerator was measured / predicted to cost just under $50 per year. A 300l fridge freezer was measered at ~ $150 per year and the BIG 600l Jenn Air Fridge / Freezer with ice maker and water chiller all plumbed in ( which gets a LOT of use ) was measured at ~$300 per year. Hope those numbers help your cause.

You might also check this thread out which talks about power usage of chest freezers later in the thread.

http://www.aussiehomebrewer.com/forum/inde...showtopic=62351
 
Sounds like your wife is either quite technical or you're trying to bamboozle her with numbers :p Can you simply tell her you're paying the running costs out of your contribution to the household (IE your wage)?

Don't forget power usage will be 2/10ths of **** all because of the STC-1000.
 
I can say I was running a small fridge with good seals etc and then added a 40 year old chest freezer and the power bill barely shifted, then swapped the fridge and the old 160 litre chesty for a 468 litre chesty (and added a small bar fridge style freezer as well) and the bill went down. don't have one of those power thingys but can say from my experience the chesty costs nothing to run at fridge temps.
 
can't you look up the star rating info and times the kw's by the price you pay on the per kw on the bill?
 
Sounds like your wife is either quite technical or you're trying to bamboozle her with numbers :p Can you simply tell her you're paying the running costs out of your contribution to the household (IE your wage)?

Don't forget power usage will be 2/10ths of **** all because of the STC-1000.

Ha! Yes, I could try that, but she is the main wage earner in the house, so I think I'd be shooting myself in the foot. She is a manager so she likes to see pretty graphs. If I can skew those graphs in my favour... then new keezer!

I'm hoping that a freezer will have far better insulating capacity than my current KegKing fridge, so hopefully the running costs will be minimal.
 
Just give her what she wants to see.....easy B)
 
Just give her what she wants to see.....easy B)

Falsify the figures!? :eek:

Actually, as long as I bought her an electrical appliance at the same time, I could blame the power bill spike on that...
 
Kaiser,

I hooked a power meter up to my new system ages ago and got good results. Its based on a small box air-conditioner unit cooling a customer built by me coolroom holding 8 kegs. It worked out that the system would cost around $38 per year to run. Not quite the same as what you are after but give you an idea what you could be up for.

Or as someone else said, take the worst case scenario, and assume that the system will run at -18 and use the manufacturers specs. That way you can tell the Minister for War and Finance that the system is going to cost a whole lot LESS that what you have quoted.

Regards,
garyd
 
It's easier to ask for forgiveness than it is for permission. heh heh.

I'd say keep it simple. Freezer with temp controller uses bugger all power. End of justification.
 
Go out and buy the chesty and a bunch of flowers! Stick the freezer somewhere inconspicuous and when she comes home butter her up with the flowers ;)
 
Go out and buy the chesty and a bunch of flowers! Stick the freezer somewhere inconspicuous and when she comes home butter her up with the flowers ;)

Easier to place the flowers on top of the chesty in a nice vase; perfect camouflage.
 
All I know is my keezer is barely on when the lid is closed. I guestimate it runs for about an hour a day.

tnd
 
Bunnings has got those power meters on special this week for $24. ;)
 
No need to buy a power meter
Go to http://www.energyrating.gov.au/compare-products/
look up the freezer you want, the annual kWh usage will be listed (for using it as a freezer). Then look up an equivalent size fridge and see the usage - use that number as an estimate for keezer consumption. Actual keezer consumption should be lower since your not trying to freeze.
 
Just buy one.

Worry never robs tomorrow of its sorrow, it only saps today of its joy.

Batz
 
Kaiser, I run a 216L Fisher chest freezer with a Fridgemate temp controller, possibly what you are after. I also have an energy meter. If you would like me to set it up in the morning and give you regular feed back over a period of time let me know. I measured my kitchen fridge opened and closed all day for a month and it came out at .40c a day. The keezer wouldn't use that much but $150 is a pittance compared with how good the beer tastes.

Drewy
 
Go for a 276L chest or above. Reasonable power usage, better insulation and enough flexibility to run 2-4 kegs plus some lagering cubes. Trust me you will not regret it

5 eyes
 

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