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294 points AgaoAnar | 7 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source | bottom
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antov825 ◴[] No.45108140[source]
That's what I was thinking too. My home server consumes like 15 W and is silent. If you get a rack mounted server made for data centers and stick it in a closet so you can't hear it then yes, i guess this approach makes sense.
replies(2): >>45108854 #>>45112423 #
1. Spooky23 ◴[] No.45108854[source]
I use a Mac Mini. When nothing it up, it draws like 7W!
replies(1): >>45110827 #
2. ryandrake ◴[] No.45110827[source]
How do you accurately measure how much current a PC is drawing at any given time? Do you have some kind of measurement device inline with the power cord?
replies(4): >>45111009 #>>45111474 #>>45112298 #>>45112513 #
3. drnick1 ◴[] No.45111009[source]
You can use "smart" plug such as the Sonoff S31 (flash ESPHome to make it cloud-free).
replies(1): >>45111325 #
4. Arnavion ◴[] No.45111325{3}[source]
And for one-off testing there's the standard P3 Kill-a-watt.
5. Spooky23 ◴[] No.45111474[source]
I have it plugged into a IKEA smart plug.
6. 01HNNWZ0MV43FF ◴[] No.45112298[source]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kill_A_Watt

Works good IME, but you have to plug it into the wall first. Sometimes if you plug the appliance in, and then plug the KAW in, it will miscalibrate

7. PeterStuer ◴[] No.45112513[source]
Yes, I have one of those for my homelab. I draw about 200W on average, but it can spike to about 1000W.

https://www.brennenstuhl.co.uk/en-GB/products/travel-adapter...