How much energy does a modern LCD display use?
September 6, 2012 10:28 PM Subscribe
If you have a recent 18" to 20" size LCD monitor and a kill-a-watt watt meter, can you please plug it into the watt meter and tell me how much power it's actually drawing?
I am trying to calculate the cumulative Wh load for a small-ish desktop PC setup to be semi permanently installed on a boat. This will include an Intel DN2800 series mini-itx Atom motherboard that consumes a max of about 10.5 watts. I have found various 19" size LCD monitors that claim power consumption of around 25W. How close to a real world figure is this?
For reference I have an old Dell 1907FP 19" 1280x1024 monitor here that is using 32W (as measured by a kill-a-watt) at 100% brightness. Therefore I am hoping that the claimed figure of 25W for a modern 19" to 20" monitor is actually pessimistic on the part of the manufacturer.
I am trying to calculate the cumulative Wh load for a small-ish desktop PC setup to be semi permanently installed on a boat. This will include an Intel DN2800 series mini-itx Atom motherboard that consumes a max of about 10.5 watts. I have found various 19" size LCD monitors that claim power consumption of around 25W. How close to a real world figure is this?
For reference I have an old Dell 1907FP 19" 1280x1024 monitor here that is using 32W (as measured by a kill-a-watt) at 100% brightness. Therefore I am hoping that the claimed figure of 25W for a modern 19" to 20" monitor is actually pessimistic on the part of the manufacturer.
Response by poster: Data point: The Dell 1907FP is 32W-33W at max, or 19W to 20W at 25% brightness. I'm hoping to find data from a post-2011 generation LED backlit model of similar size.
posted by thewalrus at 10:59 PM on September 6, 2012
posted by thewalrus at 10:59 PM on September 6, 2012
In my experience (PhD student studying energy consumption of office electronics) 25W for a newer 20" monitor is about right and could maybe be on the high side, but not by much. I find manufacturer specs for on power tend to be pretty accurate. I don't have data at hand to confirm this, though.
posted by PercussivePaul at 12:42 AM on September 7, 2012
posted by PercussivePaul at 12:42 AM on September 7, 2012
None in that range, but two that are close. Here's what I have:
posted by jwells at 7:28 AM on September 7, 2012
Brand Model Diag. inches On Claimed Sleep Dell E173FPc 17 28 35 0 Dell E177FPf 17 21.7 40 0.7 I-INC iH282 27 81 85 0.5 HP 2710m 27 84 90 0.5"On" and "Sleep" are in Watts. Note that in the specs for the first one (the oldest I have), the watts are described as "<=".
posted by jwells at 7:28 AM on September 7, 2012
You may already know this, but by far the biggest power draw for an LCD is the backlight. Setting the brightness down low will consume 50% or less of the power of the brightness at full.
posted by Nelson at 7:57 AM on September 7, 2012
posted by Nelson at 7:57 AM on September 7, 2012
Best answer: Dell P2411H 24" LED backlit
Published specs:
Voltage Required: 100 to 240 VAC/50 or 60 Hz + 3 Hz/1.5 A (Max.)
Power Consumption Operational: 27 W (typical)/ 50 W (maximum)*
Power Consumption Stand by / Sleep: Less than 0.15W
*Maximum power consumption with max luminance, Dell Soundbar, and USB active
Actual numbers (no soundbar or USB):
Max at 100% brightness: 22W
Typical at 70% brightness: 17W
25% brightness: 10W
0% brightness: 7W
At 0% the backlight is still on and the monitor is entirely usable, though not at a level that would be comfortable for an extended period of time.
posted by Max Camber at 8:50 AM on September 7, 2012 [2 favorites]
Published specs:
Voltage Required: 100 to 240 VAC/50 or 60 Hz + 3 Hz/1.5 A (Max.)
Power Consumption Operational: 27 W (typical)/ 50 W (maximum)*
Power Consumption Stand by / Sleep: Less than 0.15W
*Maximum power consumption with max luminance, Dell Soundbar, and USB active
Actual numbers (no soundbar or USB):
Max at 100% brightness: 22W
Typical at 70% brightness: 17W
25% brightness: 10W
0% brightness: 7W
At 0% the backlight is still on and the monitor is entirely usable, though not at a level that would be comfortable for an extended period of time.
posted by Max Camber at 8:50 AM on September 7, 2012 [2 favorites]
Response by poster: Thanks Max, that's exactly the sort of data I was looking for. I had a strong hunch that 19"-20" LED backlit displays would be sub 25W. If that Dell 24" is 22W at absolute max brightness. a 20" LED unit (Samsung) will probably be around 20W worst case....
posted by thewalrus at 2:28 PM on September 7, 2012
posted by thewalrus at 2:28 PM on September 7, 2012
This thread is closed to new comments.
posted by The Master and Margarita Mix at 10:43 PM on September 6, 2012