Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Ethical living

Discover eco friendly brands and sustainable fashion on our Ethical Living forum.

Anyone know roughly how much 40 units of gas is?

8 replies

Lauriefairycake · 05/11/2008 12:05

We moved to Scottish Power but haven't had a bill yet and I've worked out for the last month that we have used 40 units of gas with the heating on plenty.

Think it's about 4p per kilowatt hour?.

OP posts:
girlandboy · 05/11/2008 14:22

I'm with British Gas, but I only use 1 unit every 3 months! My bill is about £1 I think.

Incidentally, I only use gas for the hob.

(They also come and read my meter every quarter, and look at me suspiciously.) I know what they're thinking.

snorkle · 05/11/2008 14:41

The units on the meter aren't in kwH often.

The conversion used for my meter is: kWh = units2.831.02264*39.1/3.6

I pay 3.77p per KWh, but that depends on your contract. Quite often you pay more for the first so many kWh & then less for the rest.

snorkle · 05/11/2008 14:44

OK,that went wrong...

conversion should be

units x 2.83 x 1.02264 x 39.1 / 3.6

Lauriefairycake · 05/11/2008 15:54

and the figure is 1257.31315

so is that £12.57 (unlikely)

£125.70 (scary as hell)

or £1257.00 (kill me now)

aaaaarghhhhhhhhhhhhhh.............maybe I should call them up, why is it so difficult to work out?

OP posts:
snorkle · 05/11/2008 17:11

It's 1257x your price per kwh.

so, if you pay 4p/kwh it's about £50.

Lauriefairycake · 05/11/2008 17:41

oh great, that makes sense now. £50 a month to have it on as much as I like - was really worried it would be much more.

This was a test month to see what it was like being warm whenever I wanted.

OP posts:
snorkle · 07/11/2008 11:24

It will cost a bit more when the weather is colder since you have further to raise the temperature of the house to get it up to a comfortable temperature and also the heat loss from the house will be more when the temperature difference is greater so it will take more energy to maintain the comfortable temperature when it's colder outside.

In short, if we have a really cold snap, it will cost more even if you run the heating for the same number of hours per week.

Lauriefairycake · 07/11/2008 12:38

I don't have a thermostat though, just on individual radiators so it's either on or its off (has never gone above 20 degrees as very poorly insulated house)

OP posts:
New posts on this thread. Refresh page