05-03-2009, 22:35 | #1 |
Dirty Spammer
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Which uses more electricity. Desktop computer or laptop??
Just wondering really as I thought it would definately be the laptop that would use less electricity, but does anyone actually know which uses less electricity?
Does anyone try and cut down on the electricity being used in your houses, like turning the sockets off and turning things off standby? |
05-03-2009, 22:37 | #2 | |
Penelope Pitstop
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Quote:
Parents do my head in because all their electrical stuff is turned off and unplugged when not in use.
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05-03-2009, 22:40 | #3 |
Moonshine
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I'd go with laptop on the basis it will generally use components geared for lower power rather than high performance though I don't know if any efficiency or lack of via the battery would have a significant effect.
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05-03-2009, 22:43 | #4 |
Joey Tempest
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My laptop PSU is 85W
My PC's PSU is 850W I think that's my answer
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05-03-2009, 22:45 | #5 |
Chef extraordinaire
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laptop without a doubt. If anyone has seen the macbook adverts it says that uses something like 1/4 of the power of a light bulb
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05-03-2009, 22:46 | #6 | |
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Electricity wasting machines! Vix I know what you mean, that extreme would annoy me, although I don't leave my computer on when I am not using as I don't see the point. Never have though Edit: Yeah I have Leo, but how much do they cost! May as well buy a cheaper laptop and have it plugged into the power socket all year! |
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05-03-2009, 22:48 | #7 |
Joey Tempest
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Yeah, the new macbooks run at 60W peak, my macbook is 85W peak as I say.
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05-03-2009, 23:40 | #8 | |
Provider of sensible advice about homosexuals
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Short answer is that the laptop will use less power, usually a lot less but the difference might not be hugely noticeable on power bills. You might also have to factor in time taken to do tasks depending on your uses - suppose for a second you're doing a 3D render and it takes 10 minutes on your desktop which uses 300w but 35 minutes on your laptop which uses 85w, suddenly it is a whole lot less clear-cut which is the best overall (nb I haven't worked out the figures, it's just an example).
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05-03-2009, 23:44 | #9 |
BBx woz 'ere :P
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I turn off lights and certain devices when I don't need them (lamps, and lights are the only thing I can think of). Otherwise everything else is on standby - why turn it off? It loses it's time/memory, and it means that the remote control become redundant. I leave power supplies plugged in as I can't be arsed to faff about with plugs - and modern PSU don't user big fat transformers any more and are switch mode, so only draw a negligible amount of power when they're not in use (i.e. charging something).
To answer the question, the laptop will use less juice.
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05-03-2009, 23:51 | #10 | |
Do you want to hide in my box?
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Every little helps and all that. As my laptop spends half the day running on the battery, I assume it must save a fair bit compared to when I left the PC running all day.
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