In today’s energy climate more and more people have become motivated to accomplish what they can to become more energy efficient to conserve energy and money. Regrettably this same climate has encouraged some to take advantage of innocent consumers’ desires to save energy and reduce operating expenses.
Vendors that advertise power factor improvement (kVAR correction) and transient voltage suppression to save energy are a good case in point of this bad trend. Recently we are seeing more and more of these businesses cropping up and we believe it is time to set the record straight.
First off, transient voltage surge suppression (TVSS) plays an important part in improving power quality to guard sensitive equipment inside a facility. However, TVSS does not save energy. TVSS’s are barely active an infinitesimal portion of a second to defend against voltage surges which only last for less than a millisecond. To actually decrease energy use the TVSS would need to essentially cut power consumption for an extended amount of time which is not what they are designed to do. Again, TVSS is essential to protect susceptible electrical equipment but consumers should steer clear of vendors promising, or even guaranteeing, a reduction in energy consumption.
And what about salespeople who maintain that increasing power factor will save 15% or 20% or 30% of energy consumption and resultant costs? This is false but also a bit trickier.
For homes, power factor correction does zero to save energy because the average home already has an average power factor of approximately 0.97 which is nearly the perfect power factor of 1 or unity. Additionally, the unit (called a capacitor) is installed at the homes main circuit breaker. According to IEEE 5.5.3.3 capacitors must be located at or near the individual inductive motor loads to decrease power system losses by reducing heat and distribution losses known as I2R losses.
So what about commercial and industrial facilities looking to use power factor correction to shrink energy expenditures? It is completely appropriate for a business that is incurring penalties or a kVA billing structure from the utility company to improve the facility’s overall power factor by installing a capacitor bank at the main electrical service entrance or individual capacitors at or near the particular motor loads. Doing so will do away with the power factor penalties and/or reduce the kVA demand charges on the electric bill which can save considerable money and provide a significant ROI on the investment.
But what about power factor correction reducing kWh consumption? IEEE also tells us that at most I2R losses only account for 2 to 5% of the total load in a facility. Simple arithmetic tells us that it would be in opposition to the laws of physics to obtain the 15% to 30% energy reduction claimed by some vendors. Consider it. Even if your facility had 5% distribution losses and you could correct 100% of the predicament via power factor correction at every load (which can’t be done) you would still save no more than 5% at most. No where close to the claims of some capacitor reps and manufacturers.
All that said, power factor correction when done appropriately will eliminate utility penalties and kVA demand charges, improve facility power quality, increase electrical system capacity, and save a modicum of energy when applied at the proper motor loads in an industrial facility.
So make an investment in transient voltage surge suppression and power factor correction when appropriate and necessary. But caveat emptor!
Save Money On Your Company’s Energy Bill, visit Energy Edge Technologies site for strategies on saving a tremendous amount of capital on your Corporate Energy Bill or call 888-729-5722 Ext. 100.
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Content Management Systems (CMS) can be big or small, simple or complex. Defined, it refers to a system for managing content. The term Content Management System (CMS) refers to a software package that aids automate jobs and information is a certain unit or organization. Consider content as any object that is sent, received,created, stored, or otherwise managed in some way. An effective CMS software should provide a framework upon which to establish the tools needed to connect people with such information. According to the website www.cm3cms.com, an effective CMS should have following elements:
1. Tools to facilitate build any sort of content driven web interface
2. Forms management
3. User management
4. Personalisation services, i.e. the ability to target content to individual users and groups
5. Authentication
6. Opening points for purpose-specific content management applications – e.g. forums, surveys, shops, websites, intranet tools, extranet tools, information input and tracking, etc.
7. Index and search (well, James Robertson outlined this already)
8. Tools to facilitate integration with other data management systems
With CMS, your unit or organization does not have to depend on someone else to run or monitor your daily transactions. You can also update, edit and remove your contents whenever and wherever you want to. There is a standardized content delivery processes to build consistency of quality. When it comes to comfort, CMS lets you to supervise and respond promptly to users enquiries and demands and grants you global access for content changes. It also provides easy changing of layout, easy delivery of content to various channels and it helps you promptly establish new web interfaces. The benefits don’t just terminate there. With CMS, you can save on the cost of additional manpower or IT outsourcing as you or someone else in your organization can do the updating of data. It also brings down the requirement for desktop-based content software.
Learn more how CMS Systems together with good Online Marketing Strategies can help boost your business whether new or old!
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