Forum Discussion

mena661's avatar
mena661
Explorer
Nov 28, 2013

VARIAC....MEX?

Hopefully MEX will chime in but anyone else is welcome, of course. Looking to buy a VARIAC. I have a Harbor Freight manual charger that I use for equalizing and sometimes the finishing charge. The problem is that I can only use it on the 2A setting because the voltage climbs too fast on the 10A setting. I want to use the 10A to make the equalizing go quicker and use the VARIAC to limit the voltage from rising so fast. I found one on Ebay that might do the trick but not sure if it's the right size.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Variable-AC-Transformer-500VA-Variac-0-130V-TDGC2-0-5-/380681325334
  • pianotuna wrote:
    Hi Fred,

    It is good to know that the dial should not be moved when there is a load on.

    The unit referenced is rated at 500 VA. Give the battery charger 0.7 for power factor. 500 X 0.7 = 350 watts. Plenty for the 10 amp setting and enough for 20 amps. (20 x 12 = 240 / 0.7 = 343 watts)
    Thanks for doing the math PT, Golden had me sweating for a moment. So I'll need to turn off the load BEFORE turning the dial?? Hmmm. I was hoping I could adjust the VARIAC while the charger was on to keep the output steady or to slow the rise. Turning it on and off seems like a PITA although I guess I would know where to turn the dial to after messing with it.
  • westend wrote:
    If you want a better one, Staco or Superior Electric (Powerstat) are almost bullet proof.
    I've had this one since high school 40+ years ago. She's still grindin' along, just a tad light tho.

  • Hi Fred,

    It is good to know that the dial should not be moved when there is a load on.

    The unit referenced is rated at 500 VA. Give the battery charger 0.7 for power factor. 500 X 0.7 = 350 watts. Plenty for the 10 amp setting and enough for 20 amps. (20 x 12 = 240 / 0.7 = 343 watts)
  • Hi,

    Many variacs say to not turn the dial with a load on it. I would not be turning the load down to 0 volts before shutting it off. Rather I would shut off the charger first, then with no load you can adjust the voltage.

    I had been thinking of using a 10 amp variac to recharge a electric car project I have been thinking about. I would be recharging a 72 volt battery bank, and use the variac to control the input voltage to a home built rectifier.

    2 amps at 110 volts is about 220 watts, while the charger input is around 150 watts with output being 10 amps at 13.4 volts. So you should have about 30% more capacity than the charger input. Yet be careful that nobody puts the charger on "Start" mode, even for a little while, that mode will have about 20 amps output at 15 volts or so, more than 300 watts output, so much more than 320 - 330 watts input. Still not enough to trip a 3 amp fuse on the Variac, so be careful.
  • If you want a better one, Staco or Superior Electric (Powerstat) are almost bullet proof.
  • Hi mena,

    Lots of capacity on that one for the purpose you want it for.
  • That'll work just fine. These units have an easy-access glass fuse (AGC?) to protect them just in case a boo-boo happens. To make the switch last longer I always tweak the dial down to zero before throwing. Same for shutoff. I posted a link to a neat set of AC gauges, it would be neat to measure incoming voltage and total amperage when using it with a genset.