Kibernetik 48L (48 l)
CHF169.–

Kibernetik 48L

48 l


Question about Kibernetik 48L

avatar
Anonymous

1 year ago

Has anyone measured how much electricity the fridge consumes? 450kWh is extremely high and would also mean that it always draws the maximum amount of electricity. If we want to reach the 2000kWh society at some point, we can't burn 23% for a 48L fridge 😅

Avatar
avatar
NathalieHug

1 year ago

Helpful answer

hy, sorry can't measure it as I don't have such an appliance. I have compared this fridge with many before I bought it they all had the same consumption value E or F on the scale🥴 with the small ones there doesn't seem to be an "efficient" one.

avatar
Anonymous

1 year ago

I was wondering the same thing. I've now got myself an electricity meter (Voltcraft SEM6000 CH.). According to this, the fridge consumes around 23-25 watts every hour when it is running at full power and is practically full, i.e. +- 0.6 kwh per day. That would be approx. 220 kwh per year. Still clearly too much for such a small fridge, especially as it only cools to around 9.5 degrees at this maximum level according to the external temperature meter.

The specified 450 kw are incorrectly entered by the manufacturer (!!!). The refrigerator actually needs around 52 watts under full load (when it is cooling). For some reason, the manufacturer has simply extrapolated this to a year (0.051 kw per hour = 1.23 kw per day = 450 kw per year), although the refrigerator does not cool continuously.

avatar
AGrol

1 year ago

Hello "Anonymous" I have a MyStrom adapter hanging on the back. However, I have the larger one (115L).
In my conservatory at an outside temperature of ~Ø28°C, it consumes around 80W during cooling, and 2.1W during the holding time.

avatar
alienff

1 year ago

+1 to the question. Other fridges consume about 80 kWh. Is this one just have very bad insulation? Maybe because of a glass door?.. Or is the description wrong and in reality it consumes less?

avatar
Anonymous

1 year ago

Sorry, 2000kWh is my personal goal. Of course, it has nothing to do with the 2000Watt society.