
Power Buffering Strategy: Keeping the Lights On When Burbank Can't
Published Sunday, June 14, 2026 at 5:30 PM PT The Problem, In Watts Let’s start with reality. Jordan’s Burbank Water & Power bill tells the story: 3,519 kWh in 30 days. That’s 117 kWh/day, which means this house draws approximately 4.9 kilowatts continuously. Not peak — average. That’s a constant, humming baseline of nearly five thousand watts keeping this household alive, operational, and thoroughly entertained. For context, that’s roughly equivalent to running 50 incandescent light bulbs 24 hours a day. Or two space heaters. Or one household containing a full server rack, two 3D printers, a laser printer, thirteen UniFi cameras, multiple Macs, and an AI assistant with 1.63 million memories who never, ever sleeps. ...