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Jan 8, 2012
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My prospective lodger wants to bring a radiator with him. (He's Greek and likes warm environment in his bedroom.)
Does anyone know how I would quantify extra electricity used and costs please?
Currently have gas heating
Thanks!
Betty
 
You can get plug-in electricity meters, but the only one I've ever seen was so inaccurate, you may as well have put a finger in the air and chosen a figure based on the wind speed.
You could go by the number of run hours and the kW of the heater, but they often cycle on and off... what sort of electric heater is it though?
 
Making some assumptions:

2Kw heater (per example shown)
16p per kw
Hours per day 1

1.5 x 0.16 * 1 * 365 =£116.80

Divide by 12 = £9.73 per month

EDIT : You need to remember he is "topping up" your heat rather than heating an empty room
 
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Could be worse. At least that should run at the rated output, when it's not being switched off by its thermostat. So it's kW rating times hours run. But what if it's going on and off on its thermostat, or not running on full power (they usually have a couple of switches). At this point, a proper test meter wired in might be your best bet.

I do have an old electricity meter myself that has two leads - a plug on one and a socket on the other, but this is not truly safe as it's not designed to be used in this way, and if you have a lodger, you'd need to have this sort of thing done safely and to standard. But it may not cost a fortune.

If your own electricity consumption is steady and a known quantity, you could simply compare the costs before and with lodger and get a reasonably accurate idea of how much you need to charge this lodger to not be out of pocket?
 
The stat on the heater will cut it on and off, so it is variable and won't use 2kw per hour.
An old type bar fire is different because it would just put out same power while on and very heavy on electric.
You could buy a clip on power meter now and test all your appliances power draw. You just set them for pence per kw and they them tell you pence you are using for that hour.
 
With internet of things etc you would think it would be easier nowadays to calculate , but thanks guys for your thoughts🙂
 
Never easy to calculate, even with the internet of things. It's like my asking you to try to calculate how much diesel I've used in my van in the last month without knowing how many miles I've driven, what speed, and what load is being carried. You won't get anywhere close to an accurate answer.

For you, the cost could be anywhere between almost nothing and 24x the figure Murdoch has suggested (the very worst case scenario is that the heater is run at full 2kW rating and that neither the lodger, nor the thermostat, ever switches it off).

Personally I'd just make a guess of what he'll cost you (as Shaun suggested) and then change the rent if need be.

FWIW, I spent a year in a large static caravan (including all but 6 weeks of winter) and spent about £100 on electricity. Heating was almost entirely by electricity. But it wasn't that warm.
 
My prospective lodger wants to bring a radiator with him. (He's Greek and likes warm environment in his bedroom.)
Does anyone know how I would quantify extra electricity used and costs please?
Currently have gas heating
Thanks!
Betty

Hello Betty,

Good replies from the Members above - basically without knowing how many hours of use it would be impossible to calculate even an approximate cost for the Electricity used.

The reply by Member ric2013 included a good comparison of how it would be impossible to calculate how much Diesel his Van used without knowing various details including the mileage.

Member Murdoch`s message gives a good approximate calculation [re. KW Hour cost possibly being different] for a 2 KW Heater thermostatically controlled usage per hour.

However your prospective Lodger might be using the Heater for 5 or 6 hours per Day / Night.

And he might not just be `topping up the Central Heating` in his room - He might be using the Electric Heater for hours on Days / Nights when You don`t have the Heating On.

I have some Cypriot friends and a Cypriot Barber they often have family and friends over from Cyprus - even in our mid Summer I have heard them commenting on how `Cold` it is here.

Having been to Cyprus 13 times on Holiday where it has almost always been at least `32 to 38 degrees` during June, July, August and September I can see how our average Summer temperatures of 20 to 22 degrees would seem `Cold` to them.

Imagine how someone from Greece, Cyprus or a similar `Hot Country` [in Summers] would find our Winter temperatures - although it does get `Cold` in Cyprus and Greece during the Winter so they would have experience of perhaps our `Mild Winter` temperatures.

Good Luck with sorting this out.

Regards,

Chris
 
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But in Iceland they have free hot water!

On a serious note, we'd also need to know how airtight and insulated the room is. A small, very well, insulated room with limited air changes might well be kept very warm on a minimal heat input, whereas a large draughty room might well need a lot of heat just to keep a moderate temperature.

It is obvious the OP lacks the skills to be able to carry out much of a calculation (and, in any case, there are too many variables, the biggest one being unknown, and that is how the heating will be used), so my vote is for an electrician to wire in a test meter and charge accordingly.
 
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