simmo490 Posted November 12, 2008 Report Posted November 12, 2008 i am after a variable resistor for my Mk2 cortina heater fan. the old lucas standard resistor for the slow speed has had it. anyone know where i can get a varible one that will work so i can slow the speed of the motor as appripriate cheers
flyingbanana Posted November 12, 2008 Report Posted November 12, 2008 have you tried Potentiometers.dont know if any good or not but just a idea http://www.maplin.co.uk/Search.aspx?cri ... &source=15
simmo490 Posted November 12, 2008 Author Report Posted November 12, 2008 i kow potentiomiters and varible resistors do the same things etc, not sure what the actuall difference is though. i think a pot works at a much lower resistance, not sure anyone??
Toby Posted November 12, 2008 Report Posted November 12, 2008 Mk 1 Owners club ran a thing in their 1/4rly mag - they may be able to help - as well as being handsome, intelligent and funny like all Cortina owners.
simmo490 Posted November 12, 2008 Author Report Posted November 12, 2008 lol where can i get more info? does that mean now i own a cortina i may be able to pull??
Toby Posted November 13, 2008 Report Posted November 13, 2008 does that mean now i own a cortina i may be able to pull?? You'll be fighting them off..... But they'll all just be after the car And try here for the resistor http://www.mk1cortina.com/
Dalek Posted November 13, 2008 Report Posted November 13, 2008 i am after a variable resistor for my Mk2 cortina heater fan. the old lucas standard resistor for the slow speed has had it. anyone know where i can get a varible one that will work so i can slow the speed of the motor as appripriate cheers You're going to need a rheostat m8, not a variable resitor as it won't handle the current. Have a wee look here to explain it a bit better. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potentiometer Next you need to find out what the value of your old resitor was. It might say on the side. The value will be in Ohms. If it doesn't you need to get a hold of a good one and messure the resitance with a meter. You also need to know the wattage of the origional resitor so you can get a rheostat with the same or higher wattage. Hope this helps a bit. Craig
simmo490 Posted November 13, 2008 Author Report Posted November 13, 2008 cheers guys. so i need a rheostat. i know the motor draws 4.05 amps but i dont know what resistance etc i need
Supercharged Nat Posted November 13, 2008 Report Posted November 13, 2008 http://www.cpemma.co.uk/rheo.html have a read of that, some handy info there..
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now