Hands-On Engineering

Req 6b — Using Electricity

6b.
Using Electricity. Make a list of 10 electrical appliances in your home. Find out approximately how much electricity each uses in one month. Learn how to find out the amount and cost of electricity used in your home during periods of light and heavy use. List five ways to conserve electricity.

Your home’s electricity bill is a mystery to most people — a number shows up, you pay it, and that is the end of the thought. But behind that number is a fascinating system of generation, transmission, and consumption that electrical engineers designed. Understanding how much electricity your appliances use gives you the power to make smarter decisions about energy.

Step 1: List 10 Electrical Appliances

Walk through your home and identify 10 appliances that use electricity. Pick a variety — some that run constantly and some you use occasionally. Here is how to organize your list:

ApplianceLocationEstimated WattsHours Used/DayMonthly kWh
RefrigeratorKitchen15024 (runs ~8 hrs actively)~36
Central ACWhole house3,5008 (summer average)~840
Clothes dryerLaundry room5,0001~150
Television (55")Living room1005~15
Laptop computerBedroom506~9
Microwave ovenKitchen1,2000.25~9
LED light bulbs (10)Throughout10 each = 1006~18
DishwasherKitchen1,8001~54
Washing machineLaundry room5000.75~11
Gaming consoleBedroom2003~18

Note: These are approximate values. Your actual numbers will vary based on your appliances.

Step 2: Calculate Monthly Electricity Use

Electricity is measured in kilowatt-hours (kWh). One kilowatt-hour means using 1,000 watts for one hour. Here is the formula:

Monthly kWh = (Watts x Hours per Day x 30 days) / 1,000

For example, a 100-watt TV watched 5 hours per day: (100 x 5 x 30) / 1,000 = 15 kWh per month

Where to Find Wattage

Step 3: Understanding Your Electric Bill

Your electricity bill tells an engineering story. Here is what to look for:

Reading the Meter

Your electric meter measures total kWh consumed. Modern digital meters display the reading directly. Older analog meters have spinning dials you read right to left. Your utility company reads the meter each billing period and charges you for the difference.

Light Use vs. Heavy Use

Electricity use varies by season and habit:

Some utility companies charge different rates depending on the time of day — this is called time-of-use pricing. Electricity costs more during peak hours (typically 2–7 PM on weekdays when demand is highest) and less during off-peak hours (nights and weekends).

Step 4: Five Ways to Conserve Electricity

Here are proven strategies — pick five that apply to your home and explain why each one works:

  1. Switch to LED bulbs — LEDs use 75% less electricity than incandescent bulbs and last 25 times longer. Replacing 10 incandescent 60-watt bulbs with 10-watt LEDs saves about 45 kWh per month.

  2. Unplug “vampire” devices — Many electronics draw power even when turned off (TVs, game consoles, chargers). This phantom load can account for 5–10% of your electricity bill. Use a power strip and switch it off when devices are not in use.

  3. Use a programmable thermostat — Heating and cooling typically account for about half of a home’s electricity use. Setting the thermostat back 7–10 degrees for 8 hours a day can save up to 10% annually.

  4. Wash clothes in cold water — About 90% of the energy a washing machine uses goes to heating the water. Modern detergents work just as well in cold water.

  5. Air-dry dishes and clothes — Skip the dryer’s heated drying cycle in the dishwasher. Hang clothes on a line or drying rack instead of using the clothes dryer, which is one of the most energy-hungry appliances in any home.

  6. Upgrade old appliances — ENERGY STAR certified appliances use 10–50% less energy than standard models. A new ENERGY STAR refrigerator uses about half the electricity of one made 15 years ago.

  7. Use natural light — Open curtains and blinds during the day instead of turning on lights. Position desks and reading areas near windows.

A teenager in a Scout uniform in a kitchen, crouching to read the label on the back of a microwave oven, with a notebook in hand documenting wattage information for an electricity audit
U.S. Energy Information Administration — Electricity Explained Comprehensive guide to how electricity is generated, delivered, and used in the United States — with data on residential consumption by state.