220312-1452 EST
zbang:
I am inclined to think there are a lot of TED 1000 and 5000 systems out in the world that people are not using. After one does some research on their home there is not much to learn by constantly monitoring their consumption. And you are correct that using Google I do not find any TEDs listed.
It is not clear to me what you want to learn.
The Kill-A-Watt EZ is a rather good device for measuring individual loads, and it is inexpensive, about $30. This works well with all phase angles down to near zero. Current is measured with a resistor, and no current transformer. Thus, it can work well at low power factors. The reviews on it are not good. Lots of failures. I have not had this problem, but I only load them for a short time.
A sample result using the Kill-A-Watt EZ is: --- Test is a 120 V 1/3 HP induction motor with no added mechanical load. Starting current peak value about 50 A for about 6 cycles. Kill-A-Watt EZ measurements on unloaded motor ---
155 W, 630 VA, 0.25 PF, 122.3 V no load source voltage, 121.5 V running. 155 / 630 = 0.246 PF, good correlation with 0.25 .
Although I can continuously monitor my whole home power consumption, or any part, I do not. I have in the past, and the current transformers for the TED 1000 stay in place.
I have no intention of selling anything. So ignore anything at the start of the reference, just look at curves PE1 thru PE3. These derive from TED 1000 and have a resolution of 1 second. See
https://beta-a2.com/energy.html
I consider TED 1000 to be a tool, and this capability to be a research tool, not something to monitor continuously. DTE power information is more than adequate for normal purposes.
If I want detailed information on a particular load, then I can move the current transformer to that load.
There are some applications where continuous monitoring may be useful.
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