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Man that thing is old. Believe the name is rheostat. Was used in school laboratories and test labs. It is a wire-wound resistor that is set up so you can use it as a voltage divider. I suspect the support cylinder is made of ceramic so you can heat it up and not burn it up. Suspect the wire is nichrome--the ones I have seen were. Will light up like a electric stove coil if you get carried away (that is why the wire is black).
Hook 12 volts across the coil, set the slider to the middle and you get 6 volts, and a warm room, Chuckle.
Could use it to compare 1 thru 9 volt analog meters ( with a pointer, remember) with a more precise meter when you only have a 10 volt source.
Darryl
Yep, a rheostat (variable resistor). Basically a wire wound resistor with a moveable tap-slider. By the marking on the knob my guess would be zero to fifty ohms. Test it with a Ohm meter across the end terminals or hook it to a battery in series with a light bulb. Moving the slider will vary the current making the bulb brighten or dim. Be carefull not to set it for a low resistance with a high capacity battery or as stated - High current - the wire will glow possibly ruining the resistor.
Thanks,
My guess is that it isn't a very high current resistor,the size of the winding tells me it wont last long at anyting above 10 amps or so.Still, its really cool.
PV
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