Can I Use my Multimeter to Test How Much Power my Appliance (TV) is Using?


I wanted to know if my TV actually uses only 50W of power.

If it’s possible to use a multimeter to check, how do I do it and what should I avoid?

  • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    depends on you multimeter. but an eaiser option would be to get something like a kill-o-watt meter and plug it between the power source and the TV

  • DeltaTangoLima@reddrefuge.com
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    8 months ago

    This is tricky, as power is calculated as voltage x current. Measuring (or knowing) voltage is usually pretty straightforward. But accurately measuring current requires setting up the circuit so it flows through the multimeter (while set to whatever current measurement mode it has - usually “Amps A/C”, or similar). However, this method isn’t safe, or practical, for non-electricians to measure A/C appliances.

    As someone else mentioned, you could buy a multimeter that has an “amp clamp” - effectively a non-contact way of measuring current. BUT, you need to be aware…

    A typical appliance’s cable will have both active and neutral wires inside the outer layer of insulation. Current flows through a circuit - up one wire and down the other, if you will. So an amp clamp can only measure the current on one of those wires. If you were to measure both at once (ie. clamp the whole cable), the readings in each direction will cancel each other out. You’ll measure zero net current. The only way is to cut the outer insulation and clamp a single wire inside.

    I would absolutely NOT recommend this for an A/C appliance. The possibility of accidentally cutting through the insulation of one of the inner wires, combined with the possible death of the person handling it afterwards, should make this a non-starter.

    Your safest options for ANY A/C powered appliance are to either:

    1. rely on the manufacturer’s label; or
    2. buy a smart plug that measures the current for you.

    There’s many, many brands for the latter available, and most are really quite affordable.

    Edit: as another commenter said, you could possibly buy a short extension lead that splits the wires out for you, but now you’re buying a non-standard extension lead and (possibly) a new multimeter, all to validate what’s on the appliance’s label.

    A $20 smart plug with current measurement will still be your cheapest and safest option.

  • doc@kbin.social
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    8 months ago

    For all the reasons others have already stated, what you want is a Kill A Watt instead of a multimeter or another thing to buy. Plug this thing into the wall and then plug your appliances etc into the meter and leave it for a week. I will record total power draw over the duration so you can see exactly how much power is being used under normal operating conditions. With a little bit of math you can compare kilowatt hours consumed with your power company costs and figure out how much money it cost to use TV’s etc per hour.

    https://www.p3international.com/products/p4400.html

  • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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    8 months ago

    You can, but one of those wall plug-in power meters are recommended for your use case.

    I have one that looks like this, there are many clones that will do just fine, which gives W, A or V and you can even put a price per kWh to have it give you the cost of running.

    product image

  • trustnoone@lemmy.sdf.org
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    8 months ago

    Just a heads up OP worth checking your state, country or councils government websites that note about electricity. Some of them give free power/watt checkers to help people reduce their electricity usage.

  • lemmefixdat4u@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    If your meter can measure AC millivolts, use a shunt. You’ll have to build a special cable from an extension cord. Cut either the live or neutral wire, insert a shunt, which is a resistor with a very low resistance (typically milliohms), then provide some taps at either end of the shunt. Make it all electrically safe. You don’t want to do the 50/60 Hz Shuffle.

    Plug in the extension cord, plug your TV into the extension cord, then measure the AC voltage across the shunt while the TV is operating and apply I=E/R. Now you know the current in the circuit. Measure the wall outlet voltage and use P=IE to determine the power. The measurement is accurate when the power factor of the device being tested is close to 1.

    But honestly, plug-in consumer-level power meters like the Kill-A-Watt are MUCH safer to use, relatively inexpensive, and work for appliances with power factors that are not 1 (like motors). They read out voltage, wattage, and energy usage (KWh).

  • nothacking@discuss.tchncs.de
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    8 months ago

    Yes, but differentiating between actual power and apparent power will be difficult without building a rather complex circuit. A dedicated power meter will tell you, as well as computing the power factor. On the flip side, a TV’s switching power suppy should have a good power factor, so apparent power (AC amps * RMS volts) is close to actual power.

  • amio@kbin.social
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    8 months ago

    Not easily. Power is a function of current, which requires your multimeter to be in series with the load.

  • Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz
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    8 months ago

    You can, but you would be better off buying something like this:

    Upgraded Watt Power Meter Plug Home Electrical Usage Monitor Consumption, Energy Voltage Amps Kill Tester with Backlight, Overload Protection, 7 Modes Display https://a.co/d/bj4U2hA

    • apex32@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Lol, that video shows you how to measure voltage, then multiply by current to calculate power. It totally skips over measuring current.