davidd31415
Electrical
- Nov 23, 2001
- 67
Hi,
I took apart a potentiometer that I thought was a simple rheostat. The max resistance between an outer leg and the middle leg was higher than the constant resistance between the two outer legs.
It turns out to have two resistive strips inside and a wiper that connects the two. Each end of the outer strip is connected to an outer leg and the inner leg is connected to one end of the inner strip. As the pot is turned the position where the two strips are jumped together changes.
The strips are of different resistances per length and the pot is non-linear. I notice it appears to have less precision as the wiper approaches the ends.
If there might be another reason why this pot would be designed this way, please let me know what you think. My question is: what would I call a pot like this if I were looking to order one? I've seen precision, and logarithmic, but non-linear alone wouldn't exactly describe this behavior (higher precision in one area)...
Thanks,
Dave
I took apart a potentiometer that I thought was a simple rheostat. The max resistance between an outer leg and the middle leg was higher than the constant resistance between the two outer legs.
It turns out to have two resistive strips inside and a wiper that connects the two. Each end of the outer strip is connected to an outer leg and the inner leg is connected to one end of the inner strip. As the pot is turned the position where the two strips are jumped together changes.
The strips are of different resistances per length and the pot is non-linear. I notice it appears to have less precision as the wiper approaches the ends.
If there might be another reason why this pot would be designed this way, please let me know what you think. My question is: what would I call a pot like this if I were looking to order one? I've seen precision, and logarithmic, but non-linear alone wouldn't exactly describe this behavior (higher precision in one area)...
Thanks,
Dave