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On Fri, 12 Nov 2004 13:42:19 +0000, Paul Burridge
wrote: The power company run a line to my house. They supply me with electricity. This amounts to a 230V, 65A facility at the distribution board in a cupboard under the stairs. I run all my stuff from that board. The board contains several RCBOs that trip-out in the event of any leakage current being sensed. If current in = current out; they're happy and won't trip. Because they don't trip out, I conclude I don't use any current. The voltage supplied is 230VAC RMS. Since this is alternating between equal positive and negative half-cycles, the average level of this voltage supply is zero. I use no current and they effectively supply no voltage. Why do I get billed for electricity usage when I clearly can't have used any? You don't get billed for current, you get billed for energy - in the UK the measure is the kilowatt hour. Multiply your voltage by your current instant by instant, take the average (gives you power) and multiply that by the duration in hours and you have your consumption. NIce try, though... d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |