ok, so I'm planning out an 18W marshall style build with a VVR bjuilt in. The plans I have call for a 1/2W 1m linear switched(0ff at 0) pot for the VVR. I'm looking at a pot labelled as 2A, 125V, .25W. Does that mean that 125v should not be exceeded through this pot? Or can we assume if the voltage is doubled then the amp rating cuts in half? The secondary of the VVR will have 2 el84's and a 12ax7 and will be fed by a 302/0/302 PT through an EZ81. Let's say the loaded voltage is ~350. 350v/125v= a 2.8 multiplier---- and 2A/2.8=714mA which would be plenty more than enough rating to handle the VVR load, correct? Am I doing this correctly?
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question about power rating on a potentiometer
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Can you link the exact pot?
I'll guess that the switch contacts are separate and that is what the 2A 125V refers to?Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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~Semi-No0b Hobbyist~
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The person who wrote the specs for that pot catalog listing included quite a mish mash of specs.
In one place it lists "2 amp, 125VAC, 0.25W, single pole, single throw switched potentiometer."
Further down it lists "Max Rating: 0.25W, 250VDC (Audio)"
As already pointed out,2 amp, 125VAC is the switch rating but the 0.25W is the dissipation rating of the pot element so it's deranged that it should be included in the middle of that first line.
0.25W is that maximum continuous dissipation rating of the pot element (when you are dissipating across the whole element) and 250VDC is the max voltage that can be safely applied anywhere to the pot track.
I assume that it is an audio taper pot but why they wrote "250VDC (Audio)" is a very strange presentation. Maybe they were giving the shipping clerk or the stock room person an opportunity to write catalog copy. Or...maybe this pot is meant for use in powerful amps that can be played a bedroom volume without disturbing the people in the rest of the house. 250VDC (Audio) would be very quiet. At least until the speaker caught on fire.
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Always fun times when Juan uses Mega-Font and his nuke-bomb picture...
Justin"Wow it's red! That doesn't look like the standard Marshall red. It's more like hooker lipstick/clown nose/poodle pecker red." - Chuck H. -
"Of course that means playing **LOUD** , best but useless solution to modern sissy snowflake players." - J.M. Fahey -
"All I ever managed to do with that amp was... kill small rodents within a 50 yard radius of my practice building." - Tone Meister -
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Originally posted by mort View PostSo based on the load that the pot will be under, I need to find a different pot, don't I?
I've been hunting for a higher powered one with a switch but am having no luck.This isn't the future I signed up for.
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Originally posted by Leo_Gnardo View PostEnough faffing around: the pot you had in mind in the first place will work just fine. 2 amp 125V refers to the switch. Can't say I've ever seen a 1 Meg pot roasted from over powering: you'd really have to work hard to wreck one, not gonna happen in any normal amp.
Just for my own self sufficiency, where am I missing the math? ~350vdc x .12A (the sum current of 2 el84's and 1 12ax7 that this pot will be feeding) = 42w but that seems very wrong for some reason.~Semi-No0b Hobbyist~
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Originally posted by g1 View PostHow about showing us what the pot & switch are doing in the circuit.
Originally posted by mort View Post...where am I missing the math? ~350vdc x .12A (the sum current of 2 el84's and 1 12ax7 that this pot will be feeding) = 42w but that seems very wrong for some reason.
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Originally posted by mort View PostThe second attachment is for referencing the VVR itself, which is where the pot in question is drawn. oh and the switch is the main power switch for the whole amp.
I'd use a separate switch for the amp power. What sorta genius thought to put the power switch on the back of a pot doing this function...
Also with the switch separate, you may be able to find a pot that has a higher power rating. In the hi-vacuum surface studies lab we'd sometimes have to rig up something like this. Those tough ol' Allen-Bradley or Ohmite pots were rated 2 watts, some came with pre cut screwdriver-adjust shafts. Snoop the surplus sources like ApexJr.Last edited by Leo_Gnardo; 02-14-2016, 09:46 PM.This isn't the future I signed up for.
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