capacitorless
Well-known member
Bear with me, smart folks - this is new territory for yours truly.
I have a 400hz/2 amp (likely Navy) Variac that I'd like to use for something. It's of course not useful for standard civilian Variac duties. I'm wondering if it could be incorporated into a load device, for (in this case) a tube guitar amp.
It would see no more than 40w and typically lots less, and it's beefy enough that I'm not worried about it getting hot (other than maybe changing the resistance some). Any thoughts? Dumb idea? I'm known for those!
Edit: http://forum.metropoulos.net/viewtopic.php?t=24736 says this is doable and might sound decent. It's important to put a parallel resistor across the variac. I would like to make this a more complex, inductive load, though. I'll get it out of storage and check the resistance and inductance at a few different settings.
I have a 400hz/2 amp (likely Navy) Variac that I'd like to use for something. It's of course not useful for standard civilian Variac duties. I'm wondering if it could be incorporated into a load device, for (in this case) a tube guitar amp.
It would see no more than 40w and typically lots less, and it's beefy enough that I'm not worried about it getting hot (other than maybe changing the resistance some). Any thoughts? Dumb idea? I'm known for those!
Edit: http://forum.metropoulos.net/viewtopic.php?t=24736 says this is doable and might sound decent. It's important to put a parallel resistor across the variac. I would like to make this a more complex, inductive load, though. I'll get it out of storage and check the resistance and inductance at a few different settings.
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