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Energy Conservation
& Efficiency in Consumer Electronics Equipments - Others
This section of HomeTome is about Energy
Conservation & Efficiency in Consumer Electronics Equipments - Others.
See the complete list of home energy conservation & energy efficiency
topics @ HomeTome
– The Home Energy Conservation & Energy Efficiency Encyclopedia
Energy Efficient Home
& Consumer Electronics Equipments
- Home
Electronics – Home electronic products use energy when they're off
to power features like clock displays and remote controls. Those that
have earned the Energy Star use as much as 50% less energy to perform
these functions, while providing the same performance at the same price
as less-efficient models. Less energy means you pay less on your energy
bill.
- Appliances
and Home Electronics – Here you can find information in reducing the
electronics and appliances energy. By following these steps provided in
this site may help you to reduce the energy costs.
- Energy Star
Consumer Electronics – This is a project by EUF. This
project is expected to be the first of several initiatives to reduce
energy consumption in consumer electronics.
- Appliance
Energy Labels Launched in India – The International Institute
for Energy Conservation (IIEC) is a non-governmental not-for-profit
organization. Their mission is to create enabling mechanisms and
institutions world wide for toward efficient and sustainable use of
resources, including energy, water, materials, and the environment
- Home
Office and Home Electronics – Energy Star office equipment is widely
available: it provides users with dramatic savings, as much as 90%
savings for some products. Overall, Energy Star office products use
about half the electricity of standard equipment. Along with saving
energy directly, this equipment can reduce air-conditioning loads, noise
from fans and transformers, and electromagnetic field emissions from
monitors.
- Energy
- Efficient Wireless Image/Video Transmission: The purpose of energy
efficient transmission is to adapt the source coding, coding and
transmit power level of an image/video to channel condition such that energy
consumption is minimized under distortion constraint.
Energy Efficient Televisions
- Top
Energy Efficient Televisions - Basically, TVs that use the least amount
of electricity are smaller LCD TVs, and the biggest energy consumers are
the 50+ inch plasma sets. The most efficient LCD televisions are
generally those in the Sharp Aquos line. Last year, CNET tested the
energy efficiency of 20 television sets, and the Sharp Aquos LC-20B8U-S
20 inch set was found to be the least power hungry — it costs just $13 a
year to run. Rear-projection TVs are also technically energy efficient,
but these sets are large and rarely get as bright as the others. Read a
discussion on this @ Tree Hugger
- Measuring
Energy Consumption in Televisions – Like any home appliance,
televisions need energy to work. As screen size grows and picture
generation evolves beyond cathode ray tubes to liquid crystal displays
(LCD) and plasma, test methods that measure the amount of power consumed
by flat screens need to evolve as well. A new IEC standard reflects this
power consumption. The standard will also help manufacturers provide
accurate energy label ratings.
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