I need to pick a rotary switch for an attenuator project I'm working on. The silly big switches that are clearly up to the task are very expensive. I notice that many units use a switch smaller than these two and three deck Frankenstien's lab type switches. The same applies to the impedance switches of amps. So my question is:
I see switches rated at, say, .5 amps @ 125VAC. Can I exceed that current rating at a lower voltage? Is this switch capable of 62.5 watts no matter how the voltage/current ratio comes together as long as it doesn't exceed 125VAC? Or is a switch with this rating limited to .5 amps no matter what the voltage is?
I did try to look this up on google but I didn't find any articles that answered this.
Thanks
Chuck
I see switches rated at, say, .5 amps @ 125VAC. Can I exceed that current rating at a lower voltage? Is this switch capable of 62.5 watts no matter how the voltage/current ratio comes together as long as it doesn't exceed 125VAC? Or is a switch with this rating limited to .5 amps no matter what the voltage is?
I did try to look this up on google but I didn't find any articles that answered this.
Thanks
Chuck
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