Wanted: a "Save energy, be more secure" howto

Charles E Taylor IV tomalek at mindspring.com
Tue Mar 8 03:58:07 UTC 2005


On Mon, 07 Mar 2005 13:33:56 -0800
Brian Mury <b.mury at ieee.org> wrote:

> What happens to all the energy being used by my computer? It has to go
> somewhere. It ends up as heat. Your light example is an easy one - a
> lightbulb generates heat and light. The light gets absorbed by objects
> (mostly the dark coloured ones) as heat. My motor in my hard drive is
> using just enough energy to replace that which is lost to friction -
> which generates heat. The energy used to move electrons inside a circuit
> ends up as heat.

Right  But your comparison below assumes that the only heaters that
involve electricity use are resistive coils or strips.  A heat pump system
uses electricity too, but it also takes advantage of the heat in the air
(or ground, in some cases), and based on the electricity usage compared to
the heat put into the house, it's more efficient that simple resistive
heating.

> An electric heater is about the only thing that is 100% efficient. If
> you are heating with electricity, and turn on any electric device, you
> should, in theory, break even.

*If* you're just using a simple resistance heater.  This assumption
doesn't work with a heat pump style system.

-- 
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*  Charles Taylor <tomalek at mindspring.com>
*  Chemistry instructor / Mad scientist / Linux enthusiast!
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*  Web: http://home.mindspring.com/~charletiv/
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