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Quick electronics facts:Potentiometers and rheostats are both variable resistors.Potentiometers are used to vary voltage and rheostats are used to vary current. Potentiometers are three terminal devices (used here). Rheostats are two terminal devices.They are very similar, so the names are often used interchangeably. Jim
Quick electronics facts:Potentiometers and rheostats are both variable resistors.Potentiometers are used to vary voltage and rheostats are used to vary current. Potentiometers are three terminal devices (used here). Rheostats are two terminal devices.They are very similar, so the names are often used interchangeably.
I seem to recall that my old MRC power pack used a rheostat to vary the output voltage.If, as you say, "rheostats are used to vary current", then how did the rheostat in the power pack vary the output voltage?
I actually have an old MRC power pack that uses a variable transformer rather than rheostat. In theory it's insensitive to fluctuations in I
Ohm's Law, expressed as V=IRThe rheostat changes R, so V has to change as well. The actual V you get depends not only on the power pack dial setting but also I - which is how much current your motor draws. If I is constant (hint, in a model train motor it's not, but close enough) then turning the rheostat linearly varies V.
Finding this cab and thinking about using it re-activated the memories -- it's not from an MR plan. The thing was built for me by an electronix whiz who got the plan from somewhere. Maybe he whipped it up himself. The hand unit is just a pot (3 terminals, all used) and a SPST. The guts of the thing which was at the base end of the cable tethered to the cab has a power transistor w/ big heat sink, a rectifier diode (square block with four thick leads), a relay (!), and a few resistors all wired to a board. I think this was fed by raw AC power from the huge transformer (formerly from an MRC power pack). It's been separated into pieces and I vaguely remember I had a hand-drawn sketch of how to put it all together but that's long gone. All I wanted was a simple DC pack for an alternate power source to my DCC layout -- with a DPDT to switch between DC or DCC -- so I think I'll look for some toy train power pack to do the trick. Thanks for the help anyway.