[Boatanchors] "Smart" Electric Meters
Jim Wilhite
w5jo at brightok.net
Fri May 9 12:52:09 EDT 2008
I have one on my house and there is no resulting RFI from it. The meter
is read remotely from the headquarters and if the power goes off for
some reason they are notified by the monitoring station.
I don't know if they can control the shut on/shut off or not, but if
they can't then it would be an easy software upgrade.
I don't know why any power company would want to raise rates just for
that, they continue buying the meters anyway, just order the different
model. Maybe they have big plans for you to fund some increase in
salaries of the managers.
Each month we receive the bill with the usage printed on it and haven't
seen a meter reader ever here. I built the house 4 years ago and that
kind of meter is what was installed. I would imagine some require
driving by but mine doesn't. I don't know what frequency is used to
make the readings, but I have tuned as low at 70 cycles and heard
nothing that I could pin to the new style meter.
So, never fear unless the power company planners are fools for some
salesperson who buys lunch.
Jim/W5JO
----- Original Message -----
From: <RKofler at aol.com>
Subject: [Boatanchors] "Smart" Electric Meters
>I read yesterday in a newspaper article that my local electric utility
> company, Portland General Electric Co., is raising the rates to pay
> for installing
> so called "smart electric meters". The article did not go into any
> technical
> detail, but it said these meters would be able to be read remotely
> and
> eventually they would have a situation where they could remotely
> regulate some
> aspects of customers power usage during peak hours. My concern is
> that these
> meters will be a source of RF interference similar to BPL. Anybody
> have
> experience with these "smart meters"?
>
> Thanks
> Roger K7DDG
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