Low Tech RVing
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Saturday, March 03, 2007

You Pay for Power--Read Your Meter


Spend any amount of time in a commercial RV park and you’re apt to get a power bill. Since power is expensive anywhere, it’s a bitter pill for RVers when they are often presented with a bill for rates higher than the locals pay. We’ve all heard the, "Cost of reading the meter," "Administrative overhead," "Huh?" excuses.

How do you know if you’re actually being billed for what you’ve used? In many parks, old style "clock" type electric meters are used, and many folks just don’t have a clue as to how to "read" them. Digital meters are a lot easier, but not near as common.

Here’s how to read a clock type meter.

Remember that each of the hands represents a single digit of the present reading. It’s helpful to recall that some hands turn clockwise, others counter-clockwise. When the hand is between numbers, that hand is always read to the lower number.

In the picture, the reading on the meter is 43304. It may be difficult to discern that the second three (or the 3rd hand reading from left to right) is really a 3. The giveaway is simple: If the hand to the right of the one in question is past the zero, then the hand in question is to be read as higher. And remember, When meters are read they are NOT reset to zero.

So when you "check in" to your RV site, read the meter and write down the figures. To practice, you might read it every day to get the hang of it, and to see how little power RVers use--unless of course, you’re running the air conditioning! To know how much power or "killowatts" you’ve used, simply subtract the earlier reading from the present reading. Knowledge, as they say, is power.

6 Comments:

  • I've never had to read a meter in an RV park. Only at home.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 8:37 AM  

  • Where in the world have I not been? I have never seen a meter at an RV park... but then we mostly visit National, State, Corp parks and Good Sams. Never seen a meter.

    By Blogger Becky, at 9:41 AM  

  • Where in the world have we not been RVing. I have never seen a meter in an RV park. Of course, we mostly stay in National, State, Corp and a few Good Sam parks. We traveled for 8 weeks out west, and 4 weeks down the East Coast but never ran across a meter. I guess my day is not wasted as I learned something today:-) and we will now be on "alert" for those pesky things.

    By Blogger Becky, at 9:44 AM  

  • If you're being charged for electric it is certainly a good idea to read the meter BUT my experience is that you are only charged electric when you stay at a park for a month or more, otherwise the electric is built into the daily or weekly rate. Of course, I've only been doing this for about a year and there could be places that charge all the time.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 12:36 PM  

  • See lots of meters in commerical RV parks, particularly ones where you stay for more than a night or two. They're really big in the hotter areas where folks use air conditioning.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 12:39 PM  

  • If there is a meter, take a photo of it with your digital camera or phone when you set up and again when you break camp. Proof is in the picture.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 3:02 PM  

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