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Shut it off? Or, Leave it on?

By
Real Estate Broker/Owner

My Old Broker once told me to shut off my computer at lunch. But will the juice required to power down and reboot offset the energy savings?   You'll save some energy turning your computer off for an hour, but those modest energy gains might come at the expense of your computer's longevity. To figure out just how much energy an average computer consumes during it's various states of use, we asked Harvard University physicist Wolfgang Rueckner to run a few tests on his 2005 iMac G5. While starting up and shutting down the machine gobbled about 130 watts (a measure of the amount of electricity used at any instant). It consumed 92 watts sitting idle, and whispered along at 4 watts in sleep mode. Turned off, it sipped 2.8 watts because it was still plugged into an outlet. Adding in the consumption spikes that occur while shutting down and starting back up, the electricity that computers uses while turned off for an hour is barley less than what it consumes while sleeping.   Given these numbers (assuming it's even higher for a computer running Windows, which requires more processing power than a Mac operating system), if 20 people in your office turned off their computers for lunch, you'd collectively save 24 watts during the hour, about what it takes to light a standard compact-florescent bulb. At the US Dept. of Energy's projected average commercial energy price of 10.4 cents per kilowatt-hour this year you'd collectively save...one quarter of a cent a day.   But you'd lose that scant savings over time, Rueckner says, because your hard drive would wear our more quickly from all the spinning it would do while booting up or down. It would take a lot of quarter-cents to justify the $100 plus cost of a replacement drive.

Lewis Beynon
CENTURY 21 Triangle Group - Raleigh, NC
Lew B Realty

Interesting post Jason......thanks for sharing.

Dec 08, 2009 06:39 AM
Ron Trzcinski, 410-935-5844
410-935-5844 Office - Cockeysville, MD

Jason,

Good post.  Long term costly expense wins over short term trivial green.

Dec 08, 2009 06:41 AM
John Akers
Keller Williams - Kent, WA

One option would be to turn off the monitor only.  Easy on the hard drive, but saves the energy at the same time.

Dec 08, 2009 06:42 AM
Brian Lee Burke
Kenna Real Estate - Lone Tree, CO
Broker & Advising Expert-Kenna Luxury Real Estate

Jason that is interesting. During the day mine is on, for night I turn off everything icluding the powerstrip. That's when I'm not working at night... ~Rita

Dec 08, 2009 06:48 AM
Ty Lacroix
Envelope Real Estate Brokerage Inc - London, ON

Jason, isn't it thought provoking when an old thought or saying gets analysed. I'll keep my computer on but turn it off at night,

Ty

Dec 08, 2009 08:49 AM
Dave Roberts
Healdsburg Sotheby's International Realty - Healdsburg, CA

Great. Now I don't have to think about answering the questions for myself. It looks like I should shut down at night, though. I appreciate the information.

Dec 08, 2009 10:00 AM