This is an observation, rather than a question.
In the course of playing with the 'wireless PIR' I recently wrote about (see here ), and the 'dusk to dawn' photocell unit I am using with it, I was initially a little taken by surprise.
My house-wide 'energy monitoring' (clip on, hence VA, not W) indicated that the receiver part of the wireless PIR and the photocell unit were each taking about 30 VA continuously whilst powered, which did not sound too good.
However, furrher investigation indicated that both had PFs of around 0.1, so were in fact each 'consuming' only about 3W.
Looking at the devices, the photocell unit certainly, and the PIR receiver probably, use a capacitor as the voltage-dropping element to provide power for the electronics, the relays that both contain are primarily inductive and the electronics presumably take very little (so not much resistive element to the load), so I imagine that both devices look like predominantly reactive loads.
What I observed is therefore reasonably explicable, but I have to say that it hadn't previously occurred to me that the PFs of such devices would be so low.
Kind Regards, John
In the course of playing with the 'wireless PIR' I recently wrote about (see here ), and the 'dusk to dawn' photocell unit I am using with it, I was initially a little taken by surprise.
My house-wide 'energy monitoring' (clip on, hence VA, not W) indicated that the receiver part of the wireless PIR and the photocell unit were each taking about 30 VA continuously whilst powered, which did not sound too good.
However, furrher investigation indicated that both had PFs of around 0.1, so were in fact each 'consuming' only about 3W.
Looking at the devices, the photocell unit certainly, and the PIR receiver probably, use a capacitor as the voltage-dropping element to provide power for the electronics, the relays that both contain are primarily inductive and the electronics presumably take very little (so not much resistive element to the load), so I imagine that both devices look like predominantly reactive loads.
What I observed is therefore reasonably explicable, but I have to say that it hadn't previously occurred to me that the PFs of such devices would be so low.
Kind Regards, John
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