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Registered Member #4659
Joined: Sun Apr 29 2012, 06:14PM
Location:
Posts: 158
I recently discovered that if you chop off the eraser part of a pencil and expose the lead on both ends of the pencil, you get a nice big resistor providing 4-5 ohms. This immediately begs the question - what's the wattage rating on a pencil? How much power do you think it could take?
Registered Member #3324
Joined: Sun Oct 17 2010, 06:57PM
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Posts: 1276
i would think, ideally you want to take the wood of it, as that would keep it hotter, to test the wattage, just see how much power you can push through it until it glows hot, im sure you could extend its lasting by putting it in a small 1/2 inch plastic or metal tube, suspended in the middle and fill the rest with oil, metal would be better i guess as it would be able to dissapate the oils heat.. Thomas~~
Registered Member #3414
Joined: Sun Nov 14 2010, 05:05PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4245
__=|(:3)-|--{__ wrote ...
i would think, ideally you want to take the wood of it, as that would keep it hotter, to test the wattage, just see how much power you can push through it until it glows hot,
I think, for it to be useful, you'd want to establish at what power it's resistance increases by whatever percentage your acceptable tolerance is. Stripping the wood off and cooling it will help, though.
Registered Member #30
Joined: Fri Feb 03 2006, 10:52AM
Location: Glasgow, Scotland
Posts: 6706
I'm sure I remember playing with this years ago. If you apply enough power, smoke shoots out of the ends, then the wooden casing splits in half to reveal a brightly glowing pencil lead. I can't remember what voltage it took to do that, but a couple of SLA batteries in series would be a good starting point.
This reminds me of when I used to cut thin copper and steel plate with the carbon from a C battery a set of jumper leads and a car battery as I recall it Dosent take a lot of current before a pencil lead starts getting hot which could be a problem if you need a fairly constant resistance
Registered Member #3900
Joined: Thu May 19 2011, 08:28PM
Location:
Posts: 600
Steve Conner wrote ...
I'm sure I remember playing with this years ago. If you apply enough power, smoke shoots out of the ends, then the wooden casing splits in half to reveal a brightly glowing pencil lead. I can't remember what voltage it took to do that, but a couple of SLA batteries in series would be a good starting point.
Steve Conner wrote ...
I'm sure I remember playing with this years ago. If you apply enough power, smoke shoots out of the ends, then the wooden casing splits in half to reveal a brightly glowing pencil lead. I can't remember what voltage it took to do that, but a couple of SLA batteries in series would be a good starting point.
I used to do the same thing if you use mechanical pencil lead you get a higher resistance for the same length. But they don't sell then that long...
While they make great heating elements, I suspect the reason that they can't be used in all but the smallest sizes is that they have a very high thermal coefficient- not quite positive(I don't think) but close. Even the smallest currents tend to rapidly heat them. Then again, in some botch up open chassis power supply, you could possibly use them as shunts if you don't mind the glowing graphite!
Registered Member #152
Joined: Sun Feb 12 2006, 03:36PM
Location: Czech Rep.
Posts: 3384
I think power resistors are so cheap that a smoking pencil lead is unnecessary. The working temperature of ceramic power resistors is up to 275 °C, wood surely can't handle this and a bare pencil lead will have just a little surface to dissipate heat - will get much hotter than a "proper" resistor.
Registered Member #162
Joined: Mon Feb 13 2006, 10:25AM
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 3140
If you work out how to - protectt the rod - dissipate the heat from the rod - reliably connect leads to the end ............ then you'd have a commercial solid carbon resistor, together with wire wound, the earliest components, early 20th Century
Registered Member #135
Joined: Sat Feb 11 2006, 12:06AM
Location: Anywhere is fine
Posts: 1735
If you really want a high power resistor, go buy a box of carbon cutting electrodes. They're already dipped in copper, aka your contact. They're designed to handle a couple hundred amps. They're machinable AND... if you etch the copper away to different degrees, you can vary the resistance. After that, you can shave down the carbon, increasing the resistance.
And if you want to know how to etch them, use a paint pen and standard Ferric Chloride.
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