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A beginner question - feel free to shoot me down

I'm looking to modify a retired AT SMPS to drive my ham-radio. This is to be achieved by tying all the +12V wires together so the maximum amperage may be drawn from it.

The SMPS lay unused for nearly 10 years now. Reading on the internet indicates the SMPS may burn itself out if powered up without a load. To test whether the SMPS is alive, I plan to put a dummy 10ohm 10W load across one molex connector.

\$ 12V \times 8A = 96W\$ so I guess it should be good for about 80-85W

For \$ 10 \Omega\$ \$ 10W \$ load:

\$ 10W = I^2 \times 10 \Omega \$

\$ \dfrac{10W}{10\Omega}=I^2\$

\$ I^2 = 1 \frac{W}{\Omega}\$

\$ I = \sqrt{1 \frac{W}{\Omega}} = 1A\$

So the \$10 \Omega\$ resistor can handle \$ 1A \$ current.

In reality though

\$ V = I \times R \$

\$ 12V = I \times 10\Omega \$

\$ I = \dfrac{12V}{10\Omega} = 1.2A \$

\$ P = I^2 \times R = (1.2A)^2 \times 10\Omega = 14.4W\$, or about 44% overload

What I need to know here

  • Are my calculations above in order?
  • If yes, should I get a higher rated load, say 20W (if such a power-rating is available)?

EDIT: Just a short note to convey I finally got around to verification using a halogen car bulb rated at 110W (+: Thanks a tonne, all!

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    \$\begingroup\$ 12V @ 10 or 20W is called a (halogen) light bulb. Don't make it more difficult than it is and enjoy the useful 'free' desk light. \$\endgroup\$
    – jippie
    Commented Apr 18, 2012 at 19:12

2 Answers 2

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re: Halogen light bulb

Since I'd like to illustrate with a picture, I'm writing this as an answer rather than comment. This is a response @jippie to his comment to the O.P., which suggests using a light bulb instead of a resistor.

Here's a caveat to be aware of. Resistance of the filament of the light bulb will go up with temperature. By design, the filament will get quite hot. This non-linearity is illustrated by this plot:

enter image description here

For more discussion on light bulb resistance, see pp.21-25 here.

re: O.P.

Calculations in the O.P. are correct.
I concur with @Madmanguruman recommendation about higher power rating for resistors.

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  • \$\begingroup\$ Is exact resistance realy important in this application? I understood it is just to test if it functions properly. Also it is a static 12V supply. \$\endgroup\$
    – jippie
    Commented Apr 18, 2012 at 20:14
  • \$\begingroup\$ Nope - as long as the resistor is small enough to sufficiently load the ATX supply, the exact value is irrelevant. What's relevant is whether or not the resistor will cook. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Apr 18, 2012 at 20:49
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    \$\begingroup\$ @jippie Of course, I don't know how tolerant to the resistance variation will the power supply be. A the same time, the light bulb resistance can change by a factor of 2x. It's a caveat to be aware of. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Apr 18, 2012 at 20:53
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Power resistors generally don't immediately fail when overloaded, but they'll get extremely hot and may fail after a few minutes / hours.

It's usually a good idea to derate power resistors by 50%, especially if they can be inadvertently touched. A 20-25W resistor (or a series-parallel combination of 4 10W resistors) would be appropriate.

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