Watts Up Net Power Analyzer/Watt Meter USB Port 72222: Amazon.com: Home Improvement

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Watts Up Net Power Analyzer/Watt Meter USB Port 72222
 
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Watts Up Net Power Analyzer/Watt Meter USB Port 72222

by Electronic Educational Devices
1.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

Price: $224.15
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In Stock.
Ships from and sold by Smarthome.
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Product Specifications
Part Number :72222
Item Package Quantity:1
Item Dimensions
Weight:1.7 Pounds

Technical Details

  • Ethernet connection includes communication via TCP/IP, and http.
  • Power switching rated at 100,000 cycles and is normally on
  • Rate can be entered from $0.001 to $85.00 per kilowatt hour, in tenths of a penny
  • Dimensions: 7" x 4" x 2" (18cm x 10cm x 5cm) Weight: 2.5 lbs (1 kg)

Product Description

Now you can determine what it costs to run the electric water heater, energy-efficient refrigerator or any plug-in appliance. Just plug an appliance into The Watts Up .net, and it will instantly start measuring electricity thousands of times a second and displays that information in true dollars and cents. With all the same features as the Watts Up Pro ES, the Watts Up .net takes things a step further by giving you access to data via the built in web server and also offers internet enabled power switching. Track up to 18 different electrical values in real time, with peak readings that capture surges and a duty cycle that identifies how often loads are running. This product is ideal for remote monitoring of appliances gives you the power to actively reduce power consumption during peak times.Determine what it costs to run any appliance.Displays information in true dollars and cents - no need to do the conversions.Take it with you when you go appliance shopping for on-site testing.Internet enabled power switching and data access.The.Net introduces active energy savings. Features: Electronic Educational Devices Watts Up.net Electric Meter With Wired/Wireless Remote Internet Monitoring, Watts Up 72222, is internet enabled AND power switching With all the capabilities of sister model Watts Up PRO, the WattsUp.Net goes even further. Ideal for remote monitoring, the built-in web server allows data to be accessed via the internet. Connect the meter to the public internet and the meter will automatically output data. Simply go to wattsupmeters.com and create a free account to access the data from your meter. You will be able to see the live data in table format or graphical. The data can also be downloaded as a csv file. The meter can send data as fast as every second (fees apply for certain speeds - see membership level information).Connect a separately purchased wireless adapter configured in client mode into the meters ethernet port, and the meter can be used wirelessly.

Product Details

  • Item Weight: 1.7 pounds
  • Shipping Weight: 2.5 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • ASIN: B001EYGRSU
  • Item model number: 72222
  • Average Customer Review: 1.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #92,440 in Home Improvement (See Top 100 in Home Improvement)


 

Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
1.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Power control via web does not work, September 12, 2009
By 
Gavin Scott (Sunnyvale, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Watts Up Net Power Analyzer/Watt Meter USB Port 72222 (Misc.)
This is an interesting device with potential, but out-of-the-box it has some serious limitations you should know about.

The device has two data interfaces, mini-USB and Ethernet. All configuration of the device must be done via USB from a Windows computer (there is also a freeware Linux utility, and the protocol is documented as well). The Ethernet port appears to not accept incoming connections of any kind, it only makes outgoing connections at intervals to report its status.

The reason I bought the device was its ability to turn the output socket off and on by remote control over the network. I have a flaky system that periodically needs to be hard power-cycled, and this looked like a reasonably inexpensive way to get that capability.

The way the "net" feature of the device works is as follows: You configure a hostname and path to a POST script and an update interval. Each interval, it will connect to the web site configured and submit a POST request with its current status. The web server can then, if it chooses to, respond with "[1]" to turn the power off or "[0]" to turn it back on. So if you're willing to write your own custom server application to log and control the device you should (theoretically) be able to do whatever you want.

By default the device posts its data to the manufacturer's web site and you can create a free account there to view the logged data and (in theory anyway) also control the power output on the device.

There are a few problems with this. The "free" web account only accepts updates from the device every 15 minutes, and it will reconfigure the device back to 15m if you try to set it up faster.

Because the power control is done as a response to a data post, a power cycle operation will take between 15 and 30 minutes to complete. You have to ask it to turn the power off, then wait for the next poll interval, then ask for the power to be turned back on, then wait 15 minutes for that to happen.

If you wanted to have a 1 minute polling interval (reducing the time to power cycle from 30m to 2m or less) then you would have to pay $25 per month(!) for this.

Also, so far the web-based power-control feature DOES NOT EVEN WORK! You ask it to turn the power off, wait as long as 15 minutes, and then it simply reports that the power is still on. The posted energy usage data comes through fine, but either the server is not sending the power off response or the device is not getting it, or is ignoring it.

So, assuming (I haven't tried it yet) that writing your own server code will actually work, then this a pretty useful device I think. But if you're expecting to use it to monitor and control your device via the web, these features are fairly limited and the power control just does not work (at least so far for me).

Otherwise the features are similar to any of the other (lesser) Watts Up models.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Save your money and buy something else., February 27, 2011
This review is from: Watts Up Net Power Analyzer/Watt Meter USB Port 72222 (Misc.)
I bought this thinking "internet enabled" meant that it had an internal web interface that you could manage the device from. That is not the case at all. The software included only allows you to change the IP. The network features only work when the device is attached to the internet and you setup an account on a third party website. If I could have given this product a lower rating I would have.
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