Cathode Ray wrote: ↑Tue Jan 29, 2019 6:23 pm
I have used my variac in the past to start-up a new build, but I recently learned that the variac only limits voltage - not current.
So, if I have something mis-wired yet only run the variac at 12V, I could still destroy my new amp build
Well, kind of. They don't directly limit current, but by making the voltage lower, any current that goes through is lower as a consequence of nearly everything pulling less current at a lower voltage. So it's a back-handed current limit. Also, things like tube rectifiers and tubes themselves won't conduct much at lower voltage, so without the higher voltages to "push" electrons through, they don't conduct as much current.
The thing that makes a HUGE difference is to use your variac with a current meter. As you turn the voltage up from zero, you watch the current meter and when it jumps suddenly, you spin that variac knob down. I am lucky that my variac is inside a metal box and has both a voltmeter and a current meter on the box as well. That's worth concocting a case for your variac and putting a voltmeter and current on the case so it's always there and doesn't divert your DMM for that use.
Can someone explain how the Light Bulb Current Limiter differs from a variac to start-up a new amp, and how does it work with CFL's
Incandescent bulbs have a hidden special talent. An incandescent bulb has a cold resistance about 1/10 of its full-temperature resistance. That's how they stabilize at full voltage. The resistance increases until it limits the bulb's current at a certain voltage.
What that means is that with an incandescent bulb in series, the current can never get larger than the bulb's design current. This is a bit less than 1A for a 100W bulb, proportionately higher/lower with other watt ratings. If less current goes through it, as with a functioning amp limiting its own current, the bulb gets dimmer with the lowered current and the amp limits the current, not the bulb. The bulb also gives that visual indication of how much current is going into the amp.
It's a kind of squishy limit.
I like a variac AND a light bulb limiter for first power up, then remove the LBL when things look like they won't melt down.
Built in meters on a variac? Priceless.
"It's not what we don't know that gets us in trouble. It's what we know for sure that just ain't so"
Mark Twain