Jump to content

What Are You Paying For Ac?


desi

Recommended Posts

When I first moved into this house my electric bill was around 4000+ baht. Then it climbed over 5000. Now for two months it's been over 7000. (I've been here 6 months so far).

When I first got here I ran the AC all day long and sometimes all night. Then after the hot season was over I reduced it to only once in awhile YET my bill keeps going up.

Each month I use less. I no longer sleep under AC, I use a fan. I do not run the AC throughout the day and if is on at all, it's in a closed room just to take the heat off.

Someone made a comment to turn off all electricity and check the metre. I'll be doing that in the morning when it's light. 7000+ baht is insane for one fan with a brief whiff of AC.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's exactly what I was thinking. If this is so, then it's stupid of them when a line can be followed directly to their house. This is a small neighborhood, only six houses and most everyone has been living here for 20 years.

So, what is everyone else paying?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've had similar problems before, the meter was malfunctioning. Despite my insistence that something was wrong, I was basically ignore. Then 1 month I had a bill for 3 Baht.

Funny, then they told ME that there was something wrong with the meter and changed it.

That was in an apartment where I was paying the owners for electricity.

Are you paying the company or the property owner/manager?

You should be able to check the meter and get a new one , but you will probably have to pay. If you get a new one, make sure that is set to zero and new. Otherwise you maybe just get a faulty meter that someone else has complained about.

You can check your meter yourself, if you have something with a known consumtion rate. Ie if you have something that constantly uses 100 watt consumption (refrigerator or water heater no good as thermostatically controlled) ie 100 watt light bulb. Unplug and switch off everything else. In 1 hour should only use 1 tenth of a kilowatt hour. Obviously sometghing with a constant consumption of 1Kw hour would be better for an accurate test

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You can check your meter yourself, if you have something with a known consumtion rate. Ie if you have something that constantly uses 100 watt consumption (refrigerator or water heater no good as thermostatically controlled) ie 100 watt light bulb. Unplug and switch off everything else. In 1 hour should only use 1 tenth of a kilowatt hour. Obviously sometghing with a constant consumption of 1Kw hour would be better for an accurate test

Thank-you. I was wondering how I was going to check the meter if it was faulty.

This is a house and I pay the electric company myself. I noticed they've just checked this week so I'll be prepared when I get the bill. Hopefully.

desi

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I also am living in a small house with AC in three rooms. When it is warm, AC is on 2 - 3 hours in the afternoon in one room and one hour before bedtime to cool down the bedroom. During two years time I have never paid more than 800 baht per month.

Olaus

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Six months ago was the cool season so a/c bills would have been minimal and price of electric was also lower that it is now. This is still the hot season even if we call it the rainy season. The electric usage now will be quite high except on rainy days (which is not all that often).

But your usage seems very high for one or two people. Do you have pool? Electric stove? Dryer? Other high wattage users? Do the air conditioners cycle or remain on cool all night? What temperature setting do you use? Do you have a defective water pump that stays on? Do you have high wattage lamps rather than florescent?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When I first moved into this house my electric bill was around 4000+ baht. Then it climbed over 5000. Now for two months it's been over 7000. (I've been here 6 months so far).

When I first got here I ran the AC all day long and sometimes all night. Then after the hot season was over I reduced it to only once in awhile YET my bill keeps going up.

Each month I use less. I no longer sleep under AC, I use a fan. I do not run the AC throughout the day and if is on at all, it's in a closed room just to take the heat off.

Someone made a comment to turn off all electricity and check the metre. I'll be doing that in the morning when it's light. 7000+ baht is insane for one fan with a brief whiff of AC.

I have 1 air con going on average 18 hours a day, plus 3 fans going roughly the same time, have washer/drier and 2 electric showers, also 2 tv's on for about 12 hours and computer, 5 hours. My bill comes to roughly the same each month-1800 baht. If I have friends staying and run 2 air cons it goes up to 2500 baht.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I pay on average 1400 baht/month for two bedroom aircons which usually run from around 10pm until 5/6am each day set at 26 deg C.

I presume you get the aircon condensers cleaned from time to time ? amazing how dirty they get in BKK and add to your elctric bill.

Chok dee krab

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's the geckos. Cold-blooded, you see, so they soak up all the cooling you can give them. There's probably a nest of them just behind the vents. Try to stamp on their tails as you shoo them out, that'll teach them.

OR, ask your local air-con servicing bloke to top up the freon and/or check for leaks (nothing to do with the water that condenses outside though). Topping up freon is something that needs to be done every couple of years, they'll know what to do. Freon is the condensing liquid that makes air-con do its stuff, it evaporates very easily and will quickly disappear out the tiniest leak, leaving them spinning uselessly at full power to produce a slight cooling effect from the little bit that's left.

OR, check the house-building thread for ceiling insulation and other ways to keep your house cool.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.




×
×
  • Create New...