I was wondering why the Kill-A-Watt wattmeter that I normally leave things in the room plugged into was beeping. Turned out that having an electric kettle and a space heater both on on a circuit were enough to drive the power usage over the 1800W that a normal US household circuit can provide, and that apparently the thing beeps in that case. It let me flip off the kettle before the circuit breaker flipped, which was nice.

I think I might look into a low-wattage, vacuum-insulated (to help compensate for the fact that the heat will have to be put into the water over a longer period of time) kettle.

  • tal@lemmy.todayOP
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    4 hours ago

    If it was a kitchen outlet, it may have been a 20A (2400 watt) circui

    Nah, this was a 15 amp circuit, though that’s a fair point.

    Did it show you the combined wattage

    It showed something like 2400W, IIRC, but the meter itself is only rated to something like 1900 W (well, VA), so it may not have been a perfectly-accurate reading.

    goes back to try each independently, and both together

    With both on, and the other load, it shows about 2300W in total load for the circuit.

    There’s about 200W of other load on the circuit.

    The heater alone — listed as being 800W, if I remember aright – bumps it up by 700W alone.

    The kettle bumps it up by 1300W alone. So it might have been ~100W off at that point, but it was correct that it was over what the circuit could do.