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Electric Oven Consumption: Calculating 20-Minute Usage Cost for 0.8 kWh Oven with Typical Rates

kiedysktos 88642 12
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Treść została przetłumaczona polish » english Zobacz oryginalną wersję tematu
  • #1 6702624
    kiedysktos
    Level 11  
    I am a layman in the subject, and the question is simple: I have an electric oven, the manufacturer states the consumption of 0.8 kWh.

    I would like to calculate how much roughly 20 minutes of work costs - let's assume that the oven is cold at the beginning, so it pulls to the max.

    I don't remember how much electricity costs me, so let's assume a typical value.
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  • #2 6702640
    Darrieus
    Level 38  
    1 hour costs about PLN 1.5-2 (oven about 3kW), single-phase

    Quote:
    I would like to calculate how much roughly 20 minutes of work costs - let's assume that the oven is cold at the beginning, so it pulls to the max


    Max PLN 1
    And since it is cold it logically has to heat up and more energy goes.

    Added after 3 [minutes]:

    kiedysktos wrote:
    I am a layman in the subject, and the question is simple: I have an electric oven, the manufacturer states the consumption of 0.8 kWh.

    I would like to calculate how much roughly 20 minutes of work costs - let's assume that the oven is cold at the beginning, so it pulls to the max.

    I don't remember how much electricity costs me, so let's assume a typical value.



    0.8kWh It means that the oven will use 0.8kWh of electricity in an hour, but (only in laboratory conditions.)

    And that's all it is if you open the oven or something and your ass. Hot air escapes to the top, that is, to the kitchen ceiling :D

    The cost of 1 kWh with transmission 0.55-0.65 PLN
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  • #3 6702692
    Moulder
    Level 23  
    If the manufacturer specifies the energy consumption of 0.8 kWh, then in the G11 tariff you will pay about PLN 0.45 per hour of work.
    The rate per kWh in G11 is PLN 0.55 (with VAT - 22%, I think)
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  • #4 6702855
    Darrieus
    Level 38  
    That is PLN 2 for a good cake, not counting the price of the products.
    Who needs it for? I guess to frighten my mother-in-law.
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  • #5 6704027
    kiedysktos
    Level 11  
    Thanks! This is called quick reply.

    Are you assuming the oven is running at full speed for the entire hour? Because the new electric ones are well insulated, and after, for example, 15 minutes, they reach the desired temperature and then they are cyclically activated to "heat up". Just like irons :D

    That would be a zloty per hour.

    I am asking because recently I often throw myself e.g. chicken in the oven for Sunday lunch :D . For this dough, heating something ... it's worth knowing the costs.
  • #6 6704053
    Darrieus
    Level 38  
    kiedysktos wrote:
    Thanks! This is called quick reply.

    Are you assuming the oven is at full speed for the entire hour? Because the new electric ones are well insulated, and after, for example, 15 minutes, they reach the desired temperature and then they are cyclically activated to "heat up". Just like irons :D


    I know how new ones are made, and they turn on in total for about 20 minutes per hour of baking (after heating), two heaters up and down are 3.5kW, just in 20 minutes 1kWh :D
  • #7 6704097
    kiedysktos
    Level 11  
    And everything is clear - it comes from 55-65 groszy per hour of work :D
    And people say electricity is expensive.
  • #8 6704138
    Darrieus
    Level 38  
    kiedysktos wrote:
    And everything is clear - it comes from 55-65 groszy per hour of work :D
    And people say electricity is expensive.


    Because it's expensive :D 10h of TV is 60gr, count 30 or 60 days ;) :D
    Not that he played half a day, laptop 100W too, decent computer and 300 with a hook .....
  • #9 6712866
    Anonymous
    Anonymous  
  • #10 6714845
    michcio
    Electrician specialist
    No exaggeration - you are giving here a valuable PLN 55-65 per kWh. Well, unless in a two-zone tariff and daytime or if you include more fixed fees. In the regular G11, I (PGE) have about 38-39 groszy (plus fixed fees (for the meter, for quality, subscription depending on the consumption group, etc.).

    But it is still a lot. In France, the cost of a kWh is 17 grosz, in the United States, depending on the state, it is 2-10 cents (according to the current exchange rate, about 6-30 grosz, with the exception that those 30 grosz are in large cities, etc.).
  • #11 6716340
    Moulder
    Level 23  
    In Lubelskie, in G11, kWh costs 45 groszy NET (price of electricity consumed + variable component of the grid rate for transmission services + qualitative component of the system rate).
    Gross is 55 groszy - I add 22% VAT unless I'm wrong.
  • #12 6717162
    michcio
    Electrician specialist
    I have PGE Rzeszów - I live in the south of the Lublin region.

    Read from the account:
    -energy - 0.23
    - variable component of the network fee - 0.1511
    - qualitative component - 0.0098

    A total of 0.3909.
    + 22% VAT = PLN 0.476 GROSS.
  • #13 6717543
    Moulder
    Level 23  
    For me, the supplier is Lubzel.
    -energy - 0.2362
    -variable component of the network fee - 0.2075
    - qualitative component - 0.0097
    45.34 * 1.22 = 55.3gr / kWh

    When it comes to roasting chicken, everything is clear - I close.
    [Akrzy]

Topic summary

The discussion revolves around calculating the cost of using an electric oven with a specified consumption of 0.8 kWh for a 20-minute period. Users estimate that the cost of electricity ranges from PLN 0.45 to PLN 0.65 per kWh, depending on the tariff and additional fees. It is noted that the oven, when cold, will consume more energy initially to reach the desired temperature, typically running at full capacity for a portion of the cooking time. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding energy consumption for budgeting purposes, especially for regular cooking tasks like roasting chicken.
Summary generated by the language model.
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