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Prusa Mini+ Power Usage  

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Gortys
(@gortys)
New Member
Prusa Mini+ Power Usage

Hi,

I'm trying to find out what the power usage (watts/hour) of the Mini+?

 

Cheers

 

Publié : 15/10/2021 2:25 am
Gortys
(@gortys)
New Member
Topic starter answered:
Power usage (watts/hour) for PLA, PETG and ABS

Forgot to add, that's power usage (watts/hour)  for PLA, PETG and ABS.

Publié : 15/10/2021 3:40 am
John Doe
(@john-doe-3)
Estimable Member
Prusa Mini+ Power Usage

Hooked it on power meter some time ago ... cca 100W/h was average.

Publié : 15/10/2021 6:42 am
chvvkumar
(@chvvkumar)
New Member
Power consumption

here is my printer's power usage with PLA printing at 210F/60F.

My theory on the slope of the first print (that was a 17 hour, overnight print) is that the room got warmer as it became day from night and the bed and hot end were not powered as long as when it was cooler.

Publié : 21/10/2021 2:46 am
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mark
 mark
(@mark)
Reputable Member
Use Correct Units
Posted by: @gortys

Hi,

I'm trying to find out what the power usage (watts/hour) of the Mini+?

 

Cheers

 

 

Posted by: @chvvkumar

here is my printer's power usage with PLA printing at 210F/60F.

My theory on the slope of the first print (that was a 17 hour, overnight print) is that the room got warmer as it became day from night and the bed and hot end were not powered as long as when it was cooler.

Sorry to be the units police but this graph from @chvvkumar is the correct way to describe power. Power is in watts. Watts/Hour is not a a correct unit. Energy is in Watt hours. My engineering professors would give zero points if the units were wrong. I took that to heart.

Power usage will vary depending on room temperature and filament usage, and of course on temperatures.

Regards,

Mark

Publié : 21/10/2021 11:47 am
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TerTerro
(@terterro)
Active Member
PLA power consumption

For PLA when its heating up, was around 100-150w/h, then printing pla at 210c, was around 40-50w/h

  • So printing at 50w/h 24h a day, would be 1.2kw/h
Publié : 21/10/2021 11:56 am
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humming
(@humming)
New Member
RE:

Think of it this way: mph (or kph) is a rate. Watts are a rate.

If you want to know how much energy you used for a print, and you know how long the print took, and what the watts are (from the handy plot above) then that's like finding how many miles (or km's) you drove.

Take the rate * the time, and get the unit of interest:

In a car, 60 mph * 1.5 hours, means you traveled 90 miles.

in the printer case, 75 watts * 24 hours = 1800 watt hours. divide by 1000 to get 1.8 kwh.

 

Hope that makes it clear. You will likely find that for most prints electricity is negligible compared to material cost.

Ce message a été modifié il y a 3 years par humming
Publié : 07/12/2021 8:09 am
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