I have built, and do use a dim bulb tester pretty often. Dim good, bright bad, easy enough. But I was asked a question today I had never thought much about, and couldn't answer. A friend is building a circuit that involves a meter with a 12v 50mA light bulb in it. He measured the resistance of the lamp at 13 ohms, and is concerned that 12v/13ohms = almost 1 amp. He figured the filament would have to be 240 ohms to pull .05A at 12v, and I can't disagree.
So it brought him to the question, do filament resistances change with current draw, and is this the theory behind how dim bulb testers work? As more current is drawn they get brighter because the filaments are offering more resistance?
So it brought him to the question, do filament resistances change with current draw, and is this the theory behind how dim bulb testers work? As more current is drawn they get brighter because the filaments are offering more resistance?
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