A 1W LED (flashlight brightness) would cost about $1 a year to run (24/7)
True, but not all are only 1W. Regardless, after dark tonight, shutdown/turn off everything in your house as you normally would before going to bed. Make sure all your lights are turned off so you can see anything illuminated.
Then walk around the house and count all the lit LEDs. This includes kitchen appliances, modem, router, switches, UPSs, TVs, sleeping computer monitors, cable boxes, night lights. If it is plugged in, check to see if it has a lit LED in back. Most people would be surprised how many they have - typically dozens, perhaps over 100.
Then add in any device that you can "wake" with a remote control. These include most TVs, cable box, floor and ceiling fans, space heaters, and more. Include anything you can "wake" with your voice or by walking in a room or waving your hand, or by sending a signal through a cable or wifi or Bluetooth - anything that is "listening". This would include printers that wake automatically when sent a print job, computers that wake when pressing a keyboard key or wiggling a mouse, garage door openers waiting for you to come home. All these devices are consuming power if plugged in, even if powered off, as they are really just in standby mode.
Even devices that are not illuminated but have a display showing data are consuming power. Not much, but some just the same. My toaster oven has a LCD clock. It is not lit, but still showing the time. As do the 5 phone handsets sitting in their charging cradles. Any AC/DC transformer/charger/power supply plugged into the wall is consuming some power even if not plugged into a device (if you feel any warmth to the touch, it is consuming power). So does the most important appliance in the house, my programmable coffee pot is counting down the time before it automatically starts to make my morning coffee.
Add all these up and it is a lot more than $1 per year.
Here a challenge. Try to stop all AC power usage in your home. Unplug everything, I mean everything. Then go outside and look at your power meter. I bet it will still be spinning or lit to indicate something is still in the house, consuming power.
I had a friend do this. Convinced he got everything, the meter still indicated power was being consumed. He finally figured out it was the 24V transformer attached to the side of his furnace that powered the HVAC thermostat and the doorbell by the front door. And the only way to kill that was to flip the circuit breaker in the service panel.
Yes, and those "CR" button cells have basically no self-discharge, their shelf life easily exceeds 10 years
True, but sadly, not always the case. I have had them die in 3 years and even received some brand new that were DOA. So I bought a simple (and cheap) coin or button cell battery checker. Note I would never assume these cheap checker are accurate but they are close enough to show if a battery is good, or bad. And that's all I need. If I want an accurate reading I will measure the battery voltage with my multimeter with the battery in circuit.
It's also advisable not to handle these button cells with bare hands for one reason that isn't important in other types of batteries: dirt and acid from skin could contaminate the seal between the electrodes and create a conductive path.
Very true to avoid touching with bare skin. I typically just put a clean sock over my hand when replacing. The problem is not really skin "acid" directly causing a short between the battery contacts. The problem is skin oils attract dust and promote corrosion which can interfere with (create an "open") the continuity between the battery contacts and the device's battery contacts.
Either way, your advice is spot on - "
don't handle these batteries with bare hands".
By your logic I could say that keeping the TV plugged in nearly 100% of the time extends the life of it.
I don't believe that is what he is saying. He is just saying "IF" unplugging was bad, his electronics would have died long ago. That is NOT the same as saying the opposite, that is, that is, it is not the same as saying "IF" keeping it plugged in was bad, it would die early. So his logic is sound.
Keeping a TV plugged in nearly 100% of the time is very different from keeping it turned on 100% of the time. Turned on is consuming lots of power displaying images on the lit screen, processing video data through the receiver/tuner and amplifying audio through the audio circuits. All that work puts a significant load on the TV's power supply and regulator circuits.
Plugged in but turned off disables the video and audio circuits, but the TV is still "alive" - just asleep, but still listening (or even watching), waiting for a wake up signal from your remote control. Kinda reminds me of a sleeping prey animal, like a wascally wabbit whose ears are constantly moving around, listening for Elmer Fudd to sneak up on him - though still sound asleep.
Watching? Yes as many remotes are IR remotes. They use infrared light instead of RF (radio frequency) so the TV will have an IR sensor always alive (consuming power), waiting for the remote to light up.
My point is, electronics are odd. I've had monitors/TVs fail in some aspect after a handful of years and I've had ones that have lasted many, many years. Same with other hardware/appliances. You can do everything that you think is right in extending the life of hardware, but when the time goes for something to fail there is nothing you can do about it - it could happen the first time you plug that item in or it could happen 25 years down the road.
Very true. But one thing you can do to help ensure the longest life possible is to remember that "
Heat is the bane of all electronics!". It is so important, I keep that line in my signature as a reminder. So keep all electronics away from heat sources, including direct sunlight, ensure proper ventilation, and keep them clean of heat trapping dust.