Home Improvement Asked by cryptic0 on April 5, 2021
I am making an Edison wooden lamp and instead of a toggle on/off switch, I want to be able to dim the lamp. The bulb I am using is rated at 6 Watts. What type of rotary rheostat should I use for the dimming function? It needs to work at 120V.
Many rheostats I am seeing are rated for 100W which may not properly dim an LED given their low wattage.
I don't think you can. Get a dimmable LED and use a standard inline light dimmer.
Answered by Steve Wellens on April 5, 2021
Above is right. Use a standard light dimmer and make sure your bulb says "dimmable" on the package
The 100W rating for a rheostat is the power it can sink, has nothing to do with the LED's rated power. You would, if you did try a rheostat, need to pick a proper resistance. That requires some circuit analysis and math. It'd be trivial for me, but then again I'm an electronics engineer. And being an EE, I would use a standard light dimmer ;)
Answered by Kyle B on April 5, 2021
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