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July 1998, Issue 96

A PIC-Based AC Power Meter


by Rick May
Questioning your power bill? Rick shows you how to build a tool to make sure your power bill stays right on target—a portable AC power meter that displays the power delivered to and consumed by your house.

When I watch the old mechanical wattmeter on the house spin, I marvel at just how low tech this device is. No fancy displays, no RF transponders sending telemetry to roving meter-reader trucks (at least not in my neighborhood).

I always wondered why I couldn’t go out and buy a small hand-held instrument that I could use to figure out just what was causing that old-fashioned meter outside to spin so fast.

A few years ago, I came across a novel circuit design by Stephen Woodward [1]. He used a quad optoisolator (conventionally a nonlinear device) to generate an analog voltage proportional to the power consumed by a load. It used optos for safety, and, well, it was just neat.

So, off I set to marry some type of micro to that analog front end. I wanted to build a hand-held, portable AC power meter that could display the power delivered to a load. The result: see Photo 1.

may96p1.jpg (23988 bytes)

Photo 1—Here’s my dream come true—a hand-held portable AC power meter.

By tossing in a little math and some numerical integration, I could also display the energy consumed by a load. For a little added challenge, I used a PIC microcontroller that has no multiply or divide instructions.