• ivanafterall
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    2210 months ago

    Does anyone know what they’re changing the meter to? That’s a risky/difficult process, isn’t it?

    • @perviouslyiner
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      10 months ago

      This sounds very British so it is almost certainly a “smart meter” that E.ON are installing (which transmits usage data, and can be cut off or set to pre-pay remotely)

      • WashedOver
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        610 months ago

        Canadian too, well at least British Columbia. There was a big drive a few years back to modernize the meters and some of what I suspect are the types that became 5G kills you groups fought long and hard to block these new meters being swapped in.

        Something about radio waves and then not being accurate. I don’t think these people in this group were trying to steal hydro but more on some health grounds kick to block these new devices from being deployed. I think individual home owners can refuse the new meters much like people can refuse spraying on their road side properties.

        In the end as a business person I suspect they served a few purposes for real time accuracy of data collection on the status of demand and the health of the grid, and eliminating the need to send out meter readers to manually read a odometer on a old style mechanical meter.

        Unlike others I don’t think they were in the Bill Gates lane of trying to microchip you with vaccines to control you and identify a person as well as your cellphone does.

        • zout
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          1010 months ago

          About the blocking attempts reagarding accuracy; here in the Netherlands the older analog meters could only measure real power. The reasoning is that the new smart meters don’t do this, but instead measure in another way, causing consumers to also pay for reactive power. In reality, this isn’t true, but the urban legend is strong.

        • @Kiernian
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          410 months ago

          There was a big drive a few years back to modernize the meters and some of what I suspect are the types that became 5G kills you groups fought long and hard to block these new meters being swapped in.

          The kicker is that it’s HIGHLY unlikely that those meters were 5G.

          It’s muuuuch cheaper to get a CAT1 LTE radio module and go 4G WITH the added benefit that 4G has better distance/signal/etc than 5G does at a trade-off of a lower speed.

          Where I am in the midwestern U.S., those meters are typically in people’s BASEMENTS.

          5G would be a a combination of massive overkill for a few megabytes of data a MONTH and non-starter for connectivity reasons because getting bars to a tower through several feet of earth and cinder block is notably harder in the 30gHz+ frequency range when compared to the ~6gHz of 4G (or the 850mHz-2.1gHz of 3G).

          These things are streaming text files full of usage data numbers. Netflix-capable connections are wholly unnecessary. Your old 2006 motorola razr flip phone could handle the data these meters are putting out without breaking a sweat.

      • @Nastybutler
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        310 months ago

        Don’t worry. He’s got a meter guy who does it for him

    • DefiantBidet
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      410 months ago

      Could literally be the meter part if the unit which can be removed and replaced in less than 30s. Push plastic clips, pops off dead meter attach new one. Company now has a more accurate, allegedly, meter on their property you agree to maintain when you buy the house.

      • @DoomBot5
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        1510 months ago

        Company now has a more accurate, allegedly, meter on their property you agree to maintain when you buy the house.

        Huh? Since when does the landlord agree to maintain the meters? Those have always been the respective company’s property that they must maintain. All you have to do is make sure they’re accessible.