If I remember my high school electric classes correctly, 1 volt at 1 amp equals 1 watt. Therefore with higher voltage you would draw less amperage, but use the same wattage. Volts is power, amps is flow, and watts are energy produced. Less amps running through the hydro lines may create less resistance and let more useable power get to you compared to the system in north america. Another theory is maybe you have old metering equipment. When they replaced the meter at my place with a new "smart meter" that can remember when you used hydro and bill you more when you use hydro at their busy times, our bill went up about $70 per month, even though we used the same amount of hydro. When they start billing us for when we use it like the other guy from Ontario above me on this post, it will go up even more. "Smart meters" are smart for hydro, not for anybody else.
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Today's Featured Article - George's Fordson Major - by Anthony West (UK). This is a bit of a technical info to add on to the article about George's Major in the "A Towny Goes Plowing" article. George bought his Major from a an implement sale about 18 years ago for £200.00. There is no known history regarding its origins or what service it had done, but the following work was undertaken by Harold alone to bring it up to show standard. From the engine number, it was found that the major was produced late 19
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