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  2. Electricity meter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electricity_meter

    North American domestic analog (Ferraris disk) electricity meter. Electricity meter with transparent plastic case (Israel) An electricity meter, electric meter, electrical meter, energy meter, or kilowatt-hour meter is a device that measures the amount of electric energy consumed by a residence, a business, or an electrically powered device over a time interval.

  3. Wattmeter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wattmeter

    For each sample, the voltage is multiplied by the current at the same instant; the average over at least one cycle is the real power. The real power divided by the apparent volt-amperes (VA) is the power factor. A computer circuit uses the sampled values to calculate RMS voltage, RMS current, VA, power (watts), power factor, and kilowatt-hours.

  4. ANSI C12.20 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_C12.20

    ANSI C12.20 is an ANSI standard that describes an American National Standard for Electricity Meters - accuracy and performance. The C12.20 standard established the physical aspects and performance criteria for a meter's accuracy class. It refines certain details in ANSI C12.1 and ANSI C12.10. The existing ANSI accuracy classes for electric ...

  5. Watt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watt

    Power is the rate at which energy is generated or consumed and hence is measured in units (e.g. watts) that represent energy per unit time. For example, when a light bulb with a power rating of 100 W is turned on for one hour, the energy used is 100 watt hours (W·h), 0.1 kilowatt hour, or 360 kJ .

  6. Kill A Watt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kill_A_Watt

    The Tweet-a-watt [13] is a hacked version of the standard Kill-A-Watt Plug in Power Meter. By piggybacking on the device's on-board LM2902N op-amp chip, the creator was able to get readings for voltage and current and transmit to a computer, which then sent this to Twitter via handle @tweetawatt. [ 14 ]

  7. Foot-candle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foot-candle

    A foot-candle (sometimes foot candle; abbreviated fc, lm/ft 2, or sometimes ft-c) is a non-SI unit of illuminance or light intensity. The foot-candle is defined as one lumen per square foot. This unit is commonly used in lighting layouts in parts of the world where United States customary units are used, mainly the United States. [ 1 ]

  8. Electrical measurements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_measurements

    High-precision laboratory measurements of electrical quantities are used in experiments to determine fundamental physical properties such as the charge of the electron or the speed of light, and in the definition of the units for electrical measurements, with precision in some cases on the order of a few parts per million. Less precise ...

  9. Blondel's theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blondel's_theorem

    The theorem states that the power provided to a system of N conductors is equal to the algebraic sum of the power measured by N watt-meters. The N watt-meters are separately connected such that each one measures the current level in one of the N conductors and the potential level between that conductor and a common point. In a further ...