Changing a Prepaid Meter?

Changing a Prepaid Meter?

8:51 AM, 27th January 2017, About 7 years ago 19

Text Size

My sister in law is moving into a flat – everything has been agreed, bar one thing. The current meter is a pre paid one, apparently the previous tenant wanted it. gas meter

My sister in law would prefer to pay by DD which the landlord has agreed. However,the landlord has said that my sister in law has to change the meter, as it has to be in her name not the landlord’s, is this correct?

Do the electricity board charge for this?

Michael


Share This Article


Comments

Paul Green

19:10 PM, 27th January 2017, About 7 years ago

It's your home....

Michael Barnes

21:36 PM, 27th January 2017, About 7 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Paul Green" at "27/01/2017 - 15:35":

Hi Robert our old meters known as dumb meters use 1/10 (one tenth) to measure 1 unit of electricity used. That’s the last didit on our meters usually in red. Plugging in a mobile phone charger would hardly register on a dumb meter, because of the low voltage draw it requires to charge a phone. On a smart meter the decimal point is moved to record 1/1000 or even more 1/100000 and so can pick up the slightest crumb of current draw used in our homes, their by costing the consumer hundreds of pounds more in metering charges and if you multiply that for the whole country company’s the big 5 (a monopoly) stand to make billions of profits from granular charging, basically charging you for every grain of electricity used.

That is rubbish.

You are confusing resolution of display with capture of usage.
With either type of meter the cumulative reading is the same for the same actual usage (within an error margin).

With the old-style meters there is a rotating disc that allows you to determine rate of usage to much smaller resolution than the 1/10 dial.
If you look at the 1/10 dial you will see that it slowly moves and does not jump.

Michael Barnes

21:49 PM, 27th January 2017, About 7 years ago

My experience is that utility companies want to use tenant's creditworthiness to determine whether tho put in a credit meter, not the landlord's. They don't know who is going to be in there, and want to protect their bottom line, just as we do.

Paul Green

23:09 PM, 27th January 2017, About 7 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Michael Barnes" at "27/01/2017 - 21:36":

Michael read this...A one year study by Toronto Hydro showed that 84% of people’s bills went UP after ‘Smart; Meters had been installed – often by more 50%+. There is no guarantee of any savings from ‘Smart’ Meters. Instead, Ofgem’s recent ‘Smartgrid Routemap’ promotes the introduction of lucrative “Time of Use” tariffs which will require people to take significant steps to avoid being penalised for using appliances at busy times.

Michael Barnes

11:58 AM, 28th January 2017, About 7 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Paul Green" at "27/01/2017 - 23:09":

Where is this study?
When was it carried out?
I can find its existence being quoted, but no reference to the source.
Repeating something does not make it true; it only cons the gullible.

Maybe bills went up because the cost of fuel went up, not because mere was used (or in your world 'more was recorded as used').
Without the source material (rather than anecdotal references to it) we have no idea why there was the increase in bills

Paul Green

12:34 PM, 28th January 2017, About 7 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Michael Barnes" at "28/01/2017 - 11:58":

Google (38 degrees smart meters) all the information about it is there...oh and don't forget to sign the petition, about the damage smart meters cause. The petition is addressed to our current prime minister (with no mandate)

Michael Barnes

13:25 PM, 28th January 2017, About 7 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Paul Green" at "28/01/2017 - 12:34":

No, the information is not there.
There is simply the statement with nothing to show where it came from (in fact lots of emotive statements with no references to support them).

It is like Trump: saying whatever will boost his point without any concern for truth, accuracy or facts.

If the source of the information is not known, then it cannot be considered a fact, just an opinion.

Luk Udav

13:31 PM, 28th January 2017, About 7 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Michael Barnes" at "28/01/2017 - 11:58":

Michael: I too have looked. It's a Trump style "fact" i.e. a lie repeated with no verifiable source. It's fun to follow the name of the guy who registered the main site promoting this nonsense, that is, it's fun if you like to visit the edges of the tin hat brigade.

Jireh Homes

19:17 PM, 31st January 2017, About 7 years ago

Recently investigated options for tenant on changing from pre-payment to credit meter, and with current supplier no difference in charging on standard tariff (nor charge for changing over). Any potential saving is electing for payment via Direct Debit on standing charges. And contrary to current TV advert, credit meters do not estimate usage, although billing might. Easy enough to ring through accurate readings.

Leave Comments

In order to post comments you will need to Sign In or Sign Up for a FREE Membership

or

Don't have an account? Sign Up

Landlord Tax Planning Book Now