Is it possible to dim an AC lamp with a single resistor?
I want to dim the tiny lamp that lights the ring surrounding the on/
off switch on a small halogen table lamp.
The resistance across the (small) lamp measures 1 ohm (on multimeter
set to 200 ohms). Can I put a resistor in series to dim it, say
50-75%? How do I figure out what the resistance should be, and how
many watt resistor to use?
If this was a 12V DC circuit, I could deal with it, but AC, I dunno
what's happening there!
All the dimmer circuits I see are more complex. I don't need it to be
variable, and I don't need a delay. Nothing fancy. The light lights up
the whole bedroom at night and it drives my wife nuts. I have it
disconnected now, but it would be nice to have an indicator so I can
see the switch in the dark, but not a BEACON!
thanks to anyone who will illuminate this for me...
(I just want to see if this Omega shows up ... Ω)
I want to dim the tiny lamp that lights the ring surrounding the on/
off switch on a small halogen table lamp.
The resistance across the (small) lamp measures 1 ohm (on multimeter
set to 200 ohms). Can I put a resistor in series to dim it, say
50-75%? How do I figure out what the resistance should be, and how
many watt resistor to use?
If this was a 12V DC circuit, I could deal with it, but AC, I dunno
what's happening there!
All the dimmer circuits I see are more complex. I don't need it to be
variable, and I don't need a delay. Nothing fancy. The light lights up
the whole bedroom at night and it drives my wife nuts. I have it
disconnected now, but it would be nice to have an indicator so I can
see the switch in the dark, but not a BEACON!
thanks to anyone who will illuminate this for me...
(I just want to see if this Omega shows up ... Ω)