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  4. Energy meter not updating watts.

Energy meter not updating watts.

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  • I Offline
    I Offline
    integlikewhoa
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    I setup an energy meter. Watts don't seem to be working right on VERA. KWH appears to be working fine in VERA.
    Here is my readings when I'm bench testing.

    sensor started, id 2
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=255,c=0,t=17,pt=0,l=3,st=ok:1.4
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=255,c=3,t=6,pt=1,l=1,st=ok:0
    read: 0-0-2 s=255,c=3,t=6,pt=0,l=2:I
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=255,c=3,t=11,pt=0,l=12,st=ok:Energy Meter
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=255,c=3,t=12,pt=0,l=3,st=ok:1.0
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=0,t=13,pt=0,l=3,st=ok:1.4
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=2,t=24,pt=0,l=3,st=ok:1.4
    read: 0-0-2 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=0,l=6:75957
    Received last pulse count from gw:75957
    Watt:60028
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:75960
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:75.9600
    Watt:33355
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:75963
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:75.9630
    Watt:32039
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:75970
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:75.9700
    Watt:322234
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:75982
    send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:75.9820

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    • hekH Offline
      hekH Offline
      hek
      Admin
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      Your watt-value seems to get filtered away and never sent as the calculated consumption >10000. Do you really have a consumption of 60000W in your house?

      Did you do any modifications to the sketch?

      1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • korttomaK Offline
        korttomaK Offline
        korttoma
        Hero Member
        wrote on last edited by korttoma
        #3

        check that you have this correct in your sketch:

        #define PULSE_FACTOR 10000       // Nummber of blinks per KWH of your meeter
        

        The default value is 1000 I guess but I have 10000 so maybe your meter is also 10000 blinks / kWh.

        If you really do have a possibility of high consuption you should adjust the following accordingly in your sketch:

        #define MAX_WATT 15000          // Max watt value to report.
        
        • Tomas
        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • I Offline
          I Offline
          integlikewhoa
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          The test above is when I was bench testing inside the house with the sensor connected to the computer. I was using a IR tv remote to activate the sensor. So these readings can not be taken serious.

          I do now know how yet to read the serial from the meter wirelessly (maybe I need to unplug the gateway from vera and read that, or take a laptop out to the meter and plug in there)

          I did NOT modify the sketch.

          I have an ITRON OPENWAY meter with IR on the top that is supposed to be "each blink on the IR LED is 1 watt-hour of power usage" now I found this info on a forum for the ITRON CENTRON that looks the same, but maybe this is where my problem is.

          I then translated that to be
          1 watt hour = 0.001 kilowatt hours
          0.001 x 1000 blinks per KWH

          So I thought I should be good with the default settings of 1000 pulses and left everything alone.

          I guess I have a better idea of whats happening now. It's reading so high it's throwing out the data assuming it false.

          I need to

          1. probably just try the 10,000 vs. 1,000 in the pulse count per KWH.

          2. learn to read the meter so I can count the blinks and the actual KWH and do my own math on the blinks needed.

          3. take a laptop outside and attach the usb to the sensor while on the meter and see what the output is.

          More info:
          I want to say (ruff guess) with the A/C on it blinks almost every second so that's 60 blinks in a min and 3600 blinks in an hour with A/C running. (logging into my edison (www.sce.com) account and looking at yesterday's history for the few hours the A/C was running) I used 3-4 kWh (each hour) during the 4 hours I ran the a/c So lets say I average 3.5 kWh with an average of 3600 blinks per hour so The more I think about it I think that 1,000 number is right on don't you think? Or is my math off somewhere?

          Well, I'll work on and post back in 2-3 hours with a new serial update and more info when I get home to do a test on numbers 1-3 above.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • I Offline
            I Offline
            integlikewhoa
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            I think when I was using the tv remote it would flash like 4-5 times per each button I pressed so I'm sure the IR was just blinking like crazy.

            Here is my actual usage for yesterday.
            Energy.JPG

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            0
            • I Offline
              I Offline
              integlikewhoa
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              Well it's defiantly my flash counts that's way off. I brought the laptop out to the meter and plugged in and got some valid info off the meter.
              my flashes are more then 1 every second with a/c running. I counted around 30 in 25 seconds using a stopwatch.

              During this time with sketch stock at 1000 it was reading.
              Watt:285,623

              Ofcourse I changed 1000 to 10,000 as suggested for a trial and it went to
              Watt:29,373

              and for kicks I wanted to get it into something more accurate so I changed it to 100,000
              Which is now reading and updating right in VERA (ofcourse since it's not over the max)
              Watt:2972

              So I guess the trick now is trying to figure out what each blink real value is on my meter.
              3,000 watts with 220v a/c running puts me around 13.6 amps.
              I'm thinking for a few lights on,TV, fridge, ceilings fans and 3.5 ton a/c this is reading low now.

              I don't have an amp clamp and havent figured out how to read this digital Itron OPENWAY Centron meter. It only has one button.

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              • I Offline
                I Offline
                integlikewhoa
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                Well I found out meter will read the kW in 2 decimal points. It was reading around 4.3kW with the ac running. Reading the serial seeing what it was outputting vs what the meter was reading I started adjusting the sketch then uploading then reseting the sensor and re reading the serial. I got it reading about spot on with 105000 flash per KWH.

                The. I shut off the AC kW reading on Meter went down to around 1.3 ish but the serial was showing 3,011 watts or something. So it didn't change in perportion. I do know the flashes slowed down but didn't recount yet to see just how much. Maybe 1 flash ever 2 seconds now. It definitely didn't cut it into quarters from 4kw to 1kw.

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                • korttomaK Offline
                  korttomaK Offline
                  korttoma
                  Hero Member
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  nice to see you have worked out some of your issues.
                  Seems to be tricky to get a pulse from the ITRON usually it says like 1000 imp/kwh or something similar beside the led on the meter and this should be pretty accurate.

                  • Tomas
                  I 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • korttomaK korttoma

                    nice to see you have worked out some of your issues.
                    Seems to be tricky to get a pulse from the ITRON usually it says like 1000 imp/kwh or something similar beside the led on the meter and this should be pretty accurate.

                    I Offline
                    I Offline
                    integlikewhoa
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #9

                    @korttoma it sure doesn't seem like if fixed much.

                    I'll include some pictures but I don't see anything anywhere on the meter that might give an indication of the pulses. And def. nothing around the IR. I'm also confused now how even when I got it reading right at higher usage. It didn't drop down much after I cut the usage and was still given a high reading.

                    20141009_222916.jpg
                    20141009_222937.jpg
                    20141009_222930.jpg

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                    0
                    • JohnJ Offline
                      JohnJ Offline
                      John
                      Plugin Developer
                      wrote on last edited by John
                      #10

                      It looks like the calculation is off in the example sketch:

                      Your meter is providing Kh, which renders the below calculation wrong (I think)

                      watt = (3600000000.0 /interval) / ppwh;
                      

                      Your calculation should be

                      watt = (3600000000.0 * ppwh) / interval;
                      

                      3600 (one hour) times the unit (1.0 Kh) devided by the time between two blinks.

                      I could be wrong though because it is quick plain from the head.

                      My Domotica project: http://www.pidome.org

                      I 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • JohnJ John

                        It looks like the calculation is off in the example sketch:

                        Your meter is providing Kh, which renders the below calculation wrong (I think)

                        watt = (3600000000.0 /interval) / ppwh;
                        

                        Your calculation should be

                        watt = (3600000000.0 * ppwh) / interval;
                        

                        3600 (one hour) times the unit (1.0 Kh) devided by the time between two blinks.

                        I could be wrong though because it is quick plain from the head.

                        I Offline
                        I Offline
                        integlikewhoa
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #11

                        @John so I'm a bit lost (not surprised) at your formula. Can you throw some numbers in your new formula based on my information above (or fictitious numbers for an example) and give me an idea of what it should look like.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • JohnJ Offline
                          JohnJ Offline
                          John
                          Plugin Developer
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #12

                          @integlikewhoa

                          Ok, let's say there are 4 seconds between each pulse, you would then have a formula like:

                          (3600 * 1.0) / 4 = 900 WATT
                          

                          An example if a blink takes 0.91 seconds

                          (3600 * 1.0) / 0.91 = 3956 WATT
                          

                          But like i said, i could be wrong ;)

                          My Domotica project: http://www.pidome.org

                          I 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • JohnJ John

                            @integlikewhoa

                            Ok, let's say there are 4 seconds between each pulse, you would then have a formula like:

                            (3600 * 1.0) / 4 = 900 WATT
                            

                            An example if a blink takes 0.91 seconds

                            (3600 * 1.0) / 0.91 = 3956 WATT
                            

                            But like i said, i could be wrong ;)

                            I Offline
                            I Offline
                            integlikewhoa
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #13

                            @John said:

                            watt = (3600000000.0 * ppwh) / interval;

                            Well i put the Pulse count back to 1000 then I changed the formula above and now I'm getting some wierd up and down readings even tho the meter was fairly stable during this time.

                            sensor started, id 2
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=255,c=0,t=17,pt=0,l=3,st=ok:1.4
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=255,c=3,t=6,pt=1,l=1,st=ok:0
                            read: 0-0-2 s=255,c=3,t=6,pt=0,l=2:I
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=255,c=3,t=11,pt=0,l=12,st=ok:Energy Meter
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=255,c=3,t=12,pt=0,l=3,st=ok:1.0
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=0,t=13,pt=0,l=3,st=ok:1.4
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=2,t=24,pt=0,l=3,st=ok:1.4
                            read: 0-0-2 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=0,l=6:81287
                            Received last pulse count from gw:81287
                            Watt:3609
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:81316
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:81.3160
                            Watt:268656
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:81351
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:81.3510
                            Watt:264861
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:81389
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:81.3890
                            Watt:272975
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:81415
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:81.4150
                            Watt:141464
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:81421
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:81.4210
                            Watt:10582
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:81448
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:81.4480
                            Watt:12944
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:81471
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:81.4710
                            Watt:7069
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:81473
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:81.4740
                            Watt:1215
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:81479
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:81.4790
                            Watt:21161
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:81510
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:81.5100
                            Watt:5983
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=24,pt=5,l=4,st=ok:81529
                            send: 2-2-0-0 s=1,c=1,t=18,pt=7,l=5,st=ok:81.5290

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                            • I Offline
                              I Offline
                              integlikewhoa
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #14

                              i'm so lost on this. I can read the screen on the meter. I got my meter holding down to around 1.31kW according to the meter read out. I set the timer for a minute and counted the flashes on the LM393 LED. It flashed around 26 times in that min. So 60 min in an hour that's 1,560 flashes per around 1.31kWh..

                              Next I kicked on the AC and let the Kw reading on the meter level out around 3.10kW and then I set the timer and counted 54 pulses per min. x 60 for 3,240 per hour.

                              Everything looks per proportional and right along with what I found on the internet for this meter.

                              1,000 blinks per kWh.

                              Using the factory settings should put me right there is what I keep thinking. But that gets me showing 300,000 watts

                              using your above formula and pulses still at 1000 it still gets me in the 300,000 range.

                              If i change my pluse per KWh to 100,000 then it gets me into the right area at 3000 watts when my ac is on which is in the ball park but if I turn the AC off and kW drop to 1.3 ish

                              The serial is still showing 3,000 range in watts it wont drop to the 1,000 so watts it should be.

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                              • I Offline
                                I Offline
                                integlikewhoa
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #15

                                Hoping can jump in and shed some new light on this. BUMP!

                                1 Reply Last reply
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                                • hekH Offline
                                  hekH Offline
                                  hek
                                  Admin
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #16

                                  http://efundies.com/electricity/how_to_read_power_meter.htm

                                  I 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • hekH hek

                                    http://efundies.com/electricity/how_to_read_power_meter.htm

                                    I Offline
                                    I Offline
                                    integlikewhoa
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #17

                                    Thanks for that info, it seems to only confirms that the meter is working right and that my problem is in the sktech. LOL

                                    I really need help finding out why the example sketch with the "1000 blinks per kWh" set doesn't work anywhere close to where it should be.

                                    I'm using the example sketch and my meter has 1.0kH tag on the front.

                                    @hek said:

                                    http://efundies.com/electricity/how_to_read_power_meter.htm

                                    @integlikewhoa said:

                                    i'm so lost on this. I can read the screen on the meter. I got my meter holding down to around 1.31kW according to the meter read out. I set the timer for a minute and counted the flashes on the LM393 LED. It flashed around 26 times in that min. So 60 min in an hour that's 1,560 flashes per around 1.31kWh..

                                    Next I kicked on the AC and let the Kw reading on the meter level out around 3.10kW and then I set the timer and counted 54 pulses per min. x 60 for 3,240 per hour.

                                    Everything looks per proportional and right along with what I found on the internet for this meter.

                                    1,000 blinks per kWh.

                                    Using the factory settings should put me right there is what I keep thinking. But that gets me showing 300,000 watts

                                    using your above formula and pulses still at 1000 it still gets me in the 300,000 range.

                                    If i change my pluse per KWh to 100,000 then it gets me into the right area at 3000 watts when my ac is on which is in the ball park but if I turn the AC off and kW drop to 1.3 ish

                                    The serial is still showing 3,000 range in watts it wont drop to the 1,000 so watts it should be.

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