In home appliances which do I use the wattage of the input or of the output in computing electric consumption?
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input – waste = output
so the consumptions is the input
Input, because the electricity is the input energy to the appliance.
Some input energy will go waste, and the remaining will show as output.
For practical purposes, use the wattage that will drive the power company’s electric meter. That’s what you pay for. This is often the nameplate watts of the appliances. Remember though that microwave ovens may weaken with time drawing perhaps 150 watts less power when old. Also, refrigerators only draw significant power when the refrigerant compressor is working. Electric heaters may have low-medium-high settings. Computers and their screens may have "sleep modes" to save power when not in use. Also, remember that the "input" power to a light bulb may be 100 watts but that does not produce 100 watts "output" of light; most of the power produces unwanted waste heat (except in winter?).
Consumption is input.
Dunno.