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Would i be right in saying that if you do not present yourself at a iberdrola office every 3 months or so, your electric bills are higher than they should be. As you have no billing paperwork (un-like water bills)
Also, is there an iberdrola office inside a shop in pilar de horadada to go to if there is a problem. look forward to hearing from you.
Darren
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Darren - I will investigate this further for you. Yes there is an Electrical Appliance Shop in Pillar with an Iberdrola office at the back of the shop. I went there about 18months ago as there were chinese whispers working their way around the communities that every one needed to register again with Ibedrola otherwise their electrc bills would be more expensive, I sigined a form and a copy of my passport was taken and that was that. To be very honest I dont know if that was the truth - the full story - or only half of it. I am back out in Spain in a couple of days and will check with my neighbours (mostly Spanish) and see if I can get a bit of sense from them. I certainly haven't been back to the office and can't say I notice any real difference with the bills.
I confirm that I do pay by DD and I still get a copy of a bill sent to my address.
_______________________ Regards,
Mumashine
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Mumashine, thanks for your co-operation with this, how would i get hold of paper bills?
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The high street in Pilar is terrible when its busy. A word of warning, never go on a Friday when the market is on, terribly busy. I saw a couple of car incidents last time. I will not be visiting there again unless its a must.
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We're with Iberdrola and we have estimate bills and then every so often a little man comes round and takes a reading from meter outside our house and the month following his vist our bill is adjusted to reflect actual usage
Our usuage charge is based on 8.05 kw (as we have an 8 amp fuse BTW)...so for example our consumption could be 8.05kw x 29 days x 0.056529 euros/kw days
Final final element of our bill is a standing charge for equipment rental.
We manage all our payments etc via D/D
This message was last edited by JazII on 13/05/2011.
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"Our usuage charge is based on 8.05 kw (as we have an 8 amp fuse BTW)..."
Your entire house only pulls 8 amps? I think my fridge takes care of 6.
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Jazil...an 8A fuse for an 8Kw supply?
Surely not; with an 8amp fuse you wouldn't even be able to boil a kettle... if you have an ICP fitted it should be rated at at least 25A. If not why not? To be legal you should have one. 8Kw at 230V converts to 34.7 amps available.
Guy T...Your fridge draws 6A... 6A x 230 v = 1380 W about right I would guess.
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Hiya Bacardi - I have always had paper bills - again I will check this out for you.
I also have a feeling but please dont quote me on this - as I will have to check with my hubby - when we first bought our house 7 years ago - we had a 5 amp fuse and - the freezer was permanently on - obviously - and if I had the electric oven on and then stupidly put the on the kettle - we would loose the lot. It wasn't long before we had an upgrade and I think we might be 50A now.
But looking at what Foxbat has said - I could be wrong re the ampage.
_______________________ Regards,
Mumashine
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All this talk about fuses...
To be legal these days there should only be one fuse in the system, and that is on the incoming supply from the grid. its usually right next to the meter and outside the house. It is the suppliers responsibility not the customers. That fuse and the meter itself is also what the supplier removes if for any reason they decide to cut you off..
Internally there shouldn't be a fuse in sight. The house or apartment's electrical distribution box should have a number of circuit breakers, each protecting its own branch of the system. There should also be a couple of Reverse Current Detectors to protect the customer in the event that any appliance develops a short circuit to ground. Finally there should be an ICP which is a current limiter the value of which in Amps is dependent upon the supply power rating contracted with the supplier. The ICP will trip and turn everything off if the total maximum power you try to draw exceeds that contracted.
Circuit breakers, RCD's and the ICP are all legal requirements since 2007.
mumashine...as I pointed out to jazill a 5A fuse wouldnt even support a kettle, let alone a cooker...
Hope this helps...
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Thanks FB for the info
I do probably have my terminology incorrect - but I know I went over to a gas kettle when the electric one use to trip the power - when I had 2 other appliances on the go. I also have an old finca - and to be honest probably everything in it isn't up to todays legislation and legal requirements. But it will be one day.....................and if I win the lottery tonight - sooner rather than later.
Have a good weekend.
_______________________ Regards,
Mumashine
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Hmmm thx FB maybe I too have the wrong terminology (I don't really do Electrics LOL)
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