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#1
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Does reducing the resistance affect the wattage rating
of a power rheostat? I'd imagine it does, but I'm not sure how it would be derated.. Pete |
#2
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Uncle Peter wrote:
Does reducing the resistance affect the wattage rating of a power rheostat? I'd imagine it does, but I'm not sure how it would be derated.. ============================ The power rating of a rheostat is based upon its total resistance R. allowing for a max current I with P(max) equals I*I*R If the adjustable resistance is reduced to say 1/5 of the total resistance that reduced resistance can accept the same current I . This means the power rating has been reduced by a factor 5 ,in other words the power rating is proportional to the set resistance. Frank GM0CSZ / KN6WH |
#3
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On Apr 17, 2:35 pm, Highland Ham
wrote: Uncle Peter wrote: Does reducing the resistance affect the wattage rating of a power rheostat? I'd imagine it does, but I'm not sure how it would be derated.. ============================ The power rating of a rheostat is based upon its total resistance R. allowing for a max current I with P(max) equals I*I*R If the adjustable resistance is reduced to say 1/5 of the total resistance that reduced resistance can accept the same current I . This means the power rating has been reduced by a factor 5 ,in other words the power rating is proportional to the set resistance. Frank GM0CSZ / KN6WH That's logical. But just to nit-pick! :-) Got one of those ceramic tubular adjustable slide resistors. Rated at 300 watts IIRC. If I put the slider half way along I will have half the resistance wire in the circuit and dissipating heat at full current rating; correct? But still the same thermal mass of ceramic and metal. So could one perhaps argue that it might be 'slightly' (very slightly perhaps) a little more than half the power rating. Probably nothing to have any effect whatsoever in practice because one would not run a component at maximum rating at any setting anyway? |
#4
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![]() "terry" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 17, 2:35 pm, Highland Ham wrote: Uncle Peter wrote: Does reducing the resistance affect the wattage rating of a power rheostat? I'd imagine it does, but I'm not sure how it would be derated.. That's logical. But just to nit-pick! :-) Got one of those ceramic tubular adjustable slide resistors. Rated at 300 watts IIRC. If I put the slider half way along I will have half the resistance wire in the circuit and dissipating heat at full current rating; correct? But still the same thermal mass of ceramic and metal. So could one perhaps argue that it might be 'slightly' (very slightly perhaps) a little more than half the power rating. Probably nothing to have any effect whatsoever in practice because one would not run a component at maximum rating at any setting anyway? Hi Terry That's what I was wondering, the mass of the heatsink the windings are on should have a bearing on the wattage... Lacking manufacturer data I guess it is a moot point and I'll take a conservative tack.. Pete |
#5
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On Apr 20, 1:22 pm, "Uncle Peter" wrote:
"terry" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 17, 2:35 pm, Highland Ham wrote: Uncle Peter wrote: Does reducing the resistance affect the wattage rating of a power rheostat? I'd imagine it does, but I'm not sure how it would be derated.. That's logical. But just to nit-pick! :-) Got one of those ceramic tubular adjustable slide resistors. Rated at 300 watts IIRC. If I put the slider half way along I will have half the resistance wire in the circuit and dissipating heat at full current rating; correct? But still the same thermal mass of ceramic and metal. So could one perhaps argue that it might be 'slightly' (very slightly perhaps) a little more than half the power rating. Probably nothing to have any effect whatsoever in practice because one would not run a component at maximum rating at any setting anyway? Hi Terry That's what I was wondering, the mass of the heatsink the windings are on should have a bearing on the wattage... Lacking manufacturer data I guess it is a moot point and I'll take a conservative tack.. Pete The manufacturers, all I've ever seen, take that conservative tack and just put a maximum current rating on them. In the case of a rheostat, you need to consider the rating of the slider, and I'll bet you get longer slider life if you adjust it when the current is zero than when it's the full rated value. What Terry wrote has a lot of merit. In fact, with the tubular ceramics with a hollow core, you could quite reasonably get more dissipation with a given temperature rise if you orient the resistor vertically in free air, as opposed to horizontally, since it acts like a stack and will get considerable air flowing by virtue of the heat. If you REALLY wanted to optimize such a resistor, you'd space the turns further apart on the end that was going to be on top! Also, I can tell you that little 0603 surface mount resistors, nominally rated at 1/16 watt, can dissipate a whole lot more (1/4 watt!) than that if you keep other heat dissipators away from them and provide wide copper paths to lead the heat away from them; but on the othe hand if you put a whole mess of them as close together as your design rules let you and ask each to dissipate the same power, you'll find you may not be able to go above 1/100 of a watt each without getting them too hot. So not only does the amount of the rheostat in actual use make a difference, it makes a difference how you cool it. Turn a fan on it and don't adjust it while it's got current through it, and you MAY be able to safely add 40% over its current rating. YMMV, though. You know what to do to be conservative. Cheers, Tom |
#6
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On Apr 21, 2:55 am, K7ITM wrote:
On Apr 20, 1:22 pm, "Uncle Peter" wrote: "terry" wrote in message roups.com... On Apr 17, 2:35 pm, Highland Ham wrote: Uncle Peter wrote: Does reducing the resistance affect the wattage rating of a power rheostat? I'd imagine it does, but I'm not sure how it would be derated.. That's logical. But just to nit-pick! :-) Got one of those ceramic tubular adjustable slide resistors. Rated at 300 watts IIRC. If I put the slider half way along I will have half the resistance wire in the circuit and dissipating heat at full current rating; correct? But still the same thermal mass of ceramic and metal. So could one perhaps argue that it might be 'slightly' (very slightly perhaps) a little more than half the power rating. Probably nothing to have any effect whatsoever in practice because one would not run a component at maximum rating at any setting anyway? Hi Terry That's what I was wondering, the mass of the heatsink the windings are on should have a bearing on the wattage... Lacking manufacturer data I guess it is a moot point and I'll take a conservative tack.. Pete The manufacturers, all I've ever seen, take that conservative tack and just put a maximum current rating on them. In the case of a rheostat, you need to consider the rating of the slider, and I'll bet you get longer slider life if you adjust it when the current is zero than when it's the full rated value. What Terry wrote has a lot of merit. In fact, with the tubular ceramics with a hollow core, you could quite reasonably get more dissipation with a given temperature rise if you orient the resistor vertically in free air, as opposed to horizontally, since it acts like a stack and will get considerable air flowing by virtue of the heat. If you REALLY wanted to optimize such a resistor, you'd space the turns further apart on the end that was going to be on top! Also, I can tell you that little 0603 surface mount resistors, nominally rated at 1/16 watt, can dissipate a whole lot more (1/4 watt!) than that if you keep other heat dissipators away from them and provide wide copper paths to lead the heat away from them; but on the othe hand if you put a whole mess of them as close together as your design rules let you and ask each to dissipate the same power, you'll find you may not be able to go above 1/100 of a watt each without getting them too hot. So not only does the amount of the rheostat in actual use make a difference, it makes a difference how you cool it. Turn a fan on it and don't adjust it while it's got current through it, and you MAY be able to safely add 40% over its current rating. YMMV, though. You know what to do to be conservative. Cheers, Tom- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hadn't thought of the vertical Tom. But good point. I do recall years ago, seeing vertically mounted ones used as stage light dimmers, now that you mention. Fans good idea too. While all of this was a reaction to the original basic question; interesting how one idea leads to another, eh? Regards. |
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