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DRAFT / EXPERIMENTAL1)
It will take the same amount of power to do the same amount of work (heat water, etc) so why reduce it? Because it can help us stay under the limits of our power setup. What if we have a 1500w hair dryer or hot plate but only a 1000w inverter? What if we have a corded drill that will run on our inverter but not start due to surge? What if we have a heating pad that is too hot even on its lowest setting? Or a crockpot we wish we could set somewhere between HI and LO for better temperature control?
Or we might be on shore power but have multiple 120vac devices that we want to run simultaneously but would trip a 15A shore power outlet.
* analog5) resistance loads like heating pads, crock pots, hot plates, immersion heaters, rice cookers, bento “lunchboxes”, coffee grinders, etc. Warning: anything with electronics like displays, etc, will not work right and could be damaged. * simple devices with motors like fans, routers, etc. Warning: fancy “brushless” motors will not work right and could be damaged
There is little clear information on the topic since running them off inverters is an extreme minority position, but it appears that TRIACS work best on PSW inverters. They may run on MSW but seem unable to reduce power less effectively (see below) and may run hotter.
One helpful Amazon reviewer6) shared these results:
I used it this morning to control the heater element on my coffee maker - the coffee maker element is rated at 1440 W at 120V, and a Kill-a-watt registers 1420 from it. If set to non-variable mode the kill-a-watt registered 1410. When switched to variable, the output was as follows: at the lowest setting it output 687 W, at the middle of L it output 710, at the top of L: 750, at mid-M 812, at low H 955, and at the max the Kill-a-watt showed 1374 W. My desire was to reduce the output of the coffee maker to slow the brewing and it worked perfectly for that. The unit heats up whether in variable or non-variable mode, in variable mode it does get hotter, but not excessively in my opinion. Your mileage will likely vary…
The above reviewer was able to vary the power from 48% to 97% of the normal measured power by adjusting the controller's knob.
One RVer noted he tried the controller with a grinder on both PSW and MSW:7)
The grinder did not go as slow as it does on psw, but slow enough.
He didn't give numbers on the difference.
Note from secessus:
when I ran a measured 928w hotplate at the lowest controller setting the power was ~550w, or about 60% of normal full power
So putting these together we might say that on PSW the power can be reduced to ~50% and on MSW to ~60%. But another Amazon reviewer8) says:
…there is a hidden adjustment potentiometer inside for minimum power setting. Wall dimmer switches have these as well. I was able to adjust it, but I’m waiting for my tachometer to get it where it needs to be. By the sound of the motor, I can tell it will go down enough. They really should disclose this adjustment in the instructions… Note: The hidden adjustment is soldered onto the top side of the PCB inside but you need to use a small flathead screwdriver to adjust it from the back after removing the back cover.
Note that the Amp rating on these is at 120vac. 8A is 1000w, 9A is 1120w, 15A is 1800w.