I'm not a greenie (not that there's anything wrong with that) but I always turn off at the powerpoint in any case. Got a fair bit of electronics in the house, and it would surprise many how much power is drawn from the wall even when you believe the units are off.
A number of manufacturers even state that even when 'off', as much as 2W can be drawn by their equipment.
As such, I'm not sure what I can do to further test the matter. If it works, don't fook with it.
Now, I may even suggest that you make a habit of turning off at the wall, but otherwise, you can either unplug your USB cable or add a switch to the cable.
Ingredients:
- multimeter
- 2-pos levered switch (normally three pins at the bottom)
- scalpel/sharpie/stanley knife
- heatshrink
- soldering iron
- lead-free (non-Pb) solder
Cooking:
- plug USB cable into a device that supplies power
- use multimeter - often on the outer two connections - to determine GND and +5V
- remove insulation around the wires, and strip a little off your GND and +5V wires
- solder switch and apply heatshrink
**DO NOT USE THE SUPPLIED USB CABLE UNLESS YOU"RE EXPERIENCED: there's a reason for the ferrite cores on the cable, and screwing this up will not be...erm...good.
Okay, not the most in-depth explanation, but anyone interested can post a reply and if there's enough interest, I'll draw something up, or al least provide links to switches so you know what I'm talking about.
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