Can DIY Resistors Create an Effective Portable Heater?

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    Diy Heater Resistors
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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the feasibility and design considerations of creating a portable heater using DIY resistors. Participants explore various configurations, power requirements, and potential power sources for the heater, which is intended for applications similar to telescope dew heaters.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant, Jason, seeks advice on building a small circular heater using 330 ohm resistors and is considering portable power options like R/C car batteries.
  • Another participant emphasizes the importance of clarifying the resistor connections and suggests calculating the required power using Ohm's law to determine the appropriate resistance for the desired power output.
  • A participant references a webpage that outlines a wiring model and expresses uncertainty about the necessary power for heating a brass object, indicating a need for a power source that lasts at least 2 hours.
  • Another participant calculates that using 12 parallel 330 ohm resistors would yield a total resistance of 27.5 ohms, drawing 0.43A from a 12V battery and producing about 5W of power.
  • Jason reports success in soldering 12 resistors and connecting them to a 12V power supply, but seeks advice on how to properly fuse the power source and mentions plans to connect two heaters simultaneously.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants provide various calculations and suggestions regarding resistor configurations and power requirements, but there is no consensus on the best power source or specific design details for the heater.

Contextual Notes

Participants express uncertainty about the exact power requirements and configurations, and there are unresolved questions regarding the best methods for fusing the power source and ensuring safety.

Who May Find This Useful

Individuals interested in DIY electronics, portable heating solutions, or those looking to understand resistor configurations and power calculations in practical applications may find this discussion beneficial.

levi99
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DIY heater with resistors??! help please

Hi physics gurus, I have some questions I'm hoping someone with a kind enough heart can answer for me!

I am trying to build a small circular heater (similar to a dew heater for a telescope) with resistors. Basically I have 22 gauge rated 300volts hook-up wire, and i want to line up (between 40-50) 330 ohm, 1/2 watt resistors across it, and power it so it gets warm. Then wrap it in either electrical tape or something insulating.

My problem is in powering it-- I really need this to be portable, I can't use a 12V car battery! I'm thinking along the lines of some kind of R/C car battery or something else rechargeable similar to that size. How can I do this?? Is it possible with my current configuration or maybe if I switch the type of resistors I can use a 6.0 9.0 or 12.0 V R/C car battery?

I really appreciate any help anyone is able to offer. Much thanks

Jason
 
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You need to clarify how you are connecting the resistors. You stated the voltage rating of your wire, but that really is not a critical parameter, according to this page 22 ga wire has a max of .92A.

What you need to do is figure out how much power you need. Then using Ohms law and the power relationships, figure out a resistance that will give you the power you the desired power given your voltage and current limitations.

For example: you want 2 Watts and have a 12 V source.

P=IE tells us that your 22ga wire will do fine.

P = I2R tells us you need 72 Ohms resistance.

The fun part is now finding a combination of 330 ohm resistors which will yield 72 ohms.
For a parallel connection:
[tex]\frac 1 {R_T} = \frac 1 {R_1} + \frac 1 {R_2} +...+ \frac 1 {R_n}[/tex]

For a series connection

[tex]R_T = R_1 + R_2 + ... + R_n[/tex]

The parallel relationship tells us that 4 330Ohm resistors will be very close.
 
this webpage is the basic model I am following:

http://www.gbronline.com/ronkeating/heaters/heaters.html

the pictures there show exactly how I plan on wiring them, in series (right?).

I'm not sure exactly how many watts of power I need. It's going to be similar to the telescope dew heater, but about 7-8" long and it will be used to heat something brass instead. I can't use the RCA plug as that webpage shows because that's meant to be plugged into a controller box, which I don't want nor need.

I need whatever power source I use to work for at LEAST 2 hours, anymore than 3 hours is not necessary. I am still confused as what to try for a power source before I wire all these resistors and find out I need to be using different ones. Much thanks for any help!
 
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The link you provided, shows a parallel network. If you make an 8" heater as described it will consist of 12 resistors. A parallel network of 12 330 Ohm resistors will have a total resistance of 27.5 Ohms, on a 12 V battery it will draw .43A and produce about 5W. You could drive this with a bunch of D cells or as you suggest a motorcycle battery.

As for the battery rating you need .5 A for 3 hrs so you need at least 1.5 AHr. AHr or AMP Hours is a standard battery rating ask about it when you buy a battery.
 
Ok so I soldered on 12 resistors onto the copper wire and bought an eight AA battery holder. So I now have a 12V power supply and 12 resistors wired in parallel. When i apply power to it they all heat up as they're supposed to. My next question is how do I fuse this power source?? I will be adding an off/on switch but I know it should be fused. Any ideas?? thanks in advance

I'm going to be hooking up 2 of these gizmos up at the same time, the smaller one being 9 resistors. I'm guessing I can just hook the top wire up to the top and bottom wire up to the bottom to connect the strands and power them both from one source
 

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