It seems soYou might find it 'incredible' but, if those (not a single source) informing us are telling the truth, that is how it appears to be.
And that is exactly what has happened historically, one of my rental properties is in a block and being there at that time they could all be heard clunking in possibly over a half hour period, equally where my Father In Law was in sheltered accomodation there were a number of 3ph contactors staggered by timers providing power to the second meter with the 24hr supply staying on full rate.In any event, I personally not only find it very credible but, in fact, essential that there are 'two sets of timings' (one for metering and the other for load switching). Were that not the case (IF, as seems to be the case, the 'cheap electricity' period is the same for all E7 consumers), 'staggering' of the increase in demand would not be possible, since the 'off-peak-loads' of all E7 customers would switch on simultaneously, leading to potentially serious problems for generators and distributors.
You may be suggesting that, if the load switching is 'staggered' between customers, then the 'metering switching' should be correspondingly staggered.
I can't imagine for one minute they'd be able to include that in their contractThat would make sense (and would avoid the problem we are discussing) but, from what I understand, that's 'not how it is'. Indeed, if that were 'how it is' the problem being experienced by the OP (and apparently a fair number of other Octopus E7 customers) would presumably not exist?
