rubron
Electrical
- May 27, 2019
- 11
Maybe someone who works in a distribution operator/company can clarify the following to me?
A household connected to a LV grid get a contract based on the peak power they are expected to consumed. I guess, the operator estimated the power in the number of people living in the household, or if the user in the household have a special requirement (otherwise they might get a "default" power, perhaps around 4kVA?). So once the estimated power is set for a particular household, that power is reflect in the contract, so that if someone needs high power, higher must be the tariff. So, when the power is defined. How does the distributor company/operator make sure their clients consume what they said. For example, if one contract power for 4kW and then, they connect loads that account for 8kW. How the operators make sure this does not happen, not only for one, but for all the household connected into his grid. I thought, that the way for the operator does to avoid it is by the protection installed in the energy meter? First, is there a protection in the energy meter? if I increase the power at my house, I shall let the company know so that they reset the protection in the energy meter of my house, or perhaps install a new one?
I would appreciate any hint on the matter.
A household connected to a LV grid get a contract based on the peak power they are expected to consumed. I guess, the operator estimated the power in the number of people living in the household, or if the user in the household have a special requirement (otherwise they might get a "default" power, perhaps around 4kVA?). So once the estimated power is set for a particular household, that power is reflect in the contract, so that if someone needs high power, higher must be the tariff. So, when the power is defined. How does the distributor company/operator make sure their clients consume what they said. For example, if one contract power for 4kW and then, they connect loads that account for 8kW. How the operators make sure this does not happen, not only for one, but for all the household connected into his grid. I thought, that the way for the operator does to avoid it is by the protection installed in the energy meter? First, is there a protection in the energy meter? if I increase the power at my house, I shall let the company know so that they reset the protection in the energy meter of my house, or perhaps install a new one?
I would appreciate any hint on the matter.