
Don't use one if the fridge freezer is good enough for what you have.Over the past year, a lot more people have been stocking up on food and storing it away for later - a habit born out of pandemic-related scarcity. Keeping it organized (baskets, items neatly stacked) will make it easier to find what you're looking for, keeping the freezer open for less time. Having a freezer that is appropriate for the amount of food you keep Keeping freezers near capacity makes the freezing more effective. Freezers that are over 15 years old use a lot more energy than new ones. I'd also personally be wary the constant change in electricity going to the freezer and its thermostat controls, compressor.etc. Will turning it off for 1/6th of the day help save money? Maybe, but then you might be shortening the life of the food inside. So long as your food remains completely frozen, it should be OK, but when you get into a cycle of the warming and cooling it can cause freezer burn.
STAND UP FREEZER FREE
Your food may not spoil to do it, but it'll become more susceptible to the food becoming freezer burnt.įrost free are culprit for this, as they're constantly turning on and turning off, warming and cooling. The problem with turning off your freezer for 4 hours is that it will affect the food. If we allow the regulated price to rise to the so called market rate, then the people who are saving electricity are no longer subsidizing the ones that don't My opinion is that the people who are conserving electricity are subsidizing the people who don't because we all have to pay the same via the debt reduction charge. That means for every kw-hr I use, the provincial debt increases by 8.9 cents. When the wholesale electricity price is higher than the regulated rate, the difference is added into the provincial debtįor example, say the regulated rate is 9.1 cents per kw-hr, but the wholesale rate this hour is 18 cents. The rates you pay today are regulated (by the OEB in Ontario) and are artificially low. So keep on cutting back and you will keep on paying more. Why don't we all go just go back to the caveman days? The problem here folks is that the more people conserve, the more the utility rates will need to be increased as the utilities costs such as employees and equipment have not decreased.

So keep on cutting back and you will keep on paying more.įrankie3s wrote: ↑+1.
STAND UP FREEZER INSTALL
The best way to save money or energy is to install a tankless hot water system, or a solar heat system to supplement your electrical tank. You are not going to save any money or energy at all this way. So if you shut the tank off for 4 hours overnight, and lose 4 degrees of heat, that is 4 degrees more the tank now has to heat up in the next 4 hours before you take your morning shower, so it will be doing double-duty. The tank hardly uses any power sitting there.

This doesn't make a whole lot of sense either because almost hot wate rheaters are very well insulated. Why don't you just adjust the thermostat so it is not so cold? You will save the same amount of power, save on a power meter, and the food will remain at a constant temperature so it is not thawing and re-freezing all of the time. If you think you can get away with keeping your freezer off for 4 hours / day, then that means it is set much too high and is overly cold. The thermostat kicks the compressor on and off as needed - it is not on any more than it has to be to keep the unit at the temperature you have it set at. Your freezer and frige have thermostats in them for a reason, it is to keep the thing at a desired temperature, all the time. RemainingĬustomers will transition to TOU rates over the next 12 months.Įffective May 1, 2009, the TOU summer prices are:īrunes wrote: ↑This whole scheme makes no sense.

Make the switch to Time-of-Use (TOU) rates beginning June 2009. Hydro) today made it official: the first 10,000 Toronto Hydro customers will " TORONTO, May 14 /CNW/ - Toronto Hydro-Electric System Limited (Toronto The price of of electricity will rise dramatically (3-4X) during the peak day hours, so the idea is to run you fridge extra hard when electricity is cheap and turn it off when the price goes high. It for the whole real time of use (TOU) pricing scheme that Ontario will have soon as Macgyver mentioned above. Brunes wrote: ↑This whole scheme makes no sense.
