Steven,
Cold resistance of a bulb is much lower than hot resistance. That's why
most bulbs burn out when you turn them on.
While it may not have an exact correlation, I just measured the cold
resistance of a 130V 75W bulb and it measured 21 ohms. That would be 804
Watts cold filament dissipation. Using Ohms law, the resistance of a
130V 75W lamp will be 225 ohms hot, so you might be able to measure the
resistance of another lamp and multiply the resistance by 10 to get hot
resistance, but my measurements is just a sample of one. YMMV.
Peace,
Pat
Thusly spake Steven Trovato:
> Are there other switches in the same panel that are lit to the same
> brightness? If you are so inclined, you could always measure the
> resistance of a working bulb in another switch and derive from
> there. V=IR and all that rot.
>
> -Steve
>
> At 10:37 AM 2/25/2008, Pat Horne wrote:
>
>> Are there any Pick-A-Part places where you could pull another switch for
>> cheap? Or is there a group for these cars where someone could give you
>> the current draw for the lamp?
>>
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--
Pat Horne, Owner, Horne Systems
(512) 797-7501 Voice 5026 FM 2001
Pat@HorneSystemsTx.com Lockhart, TX 78644-4443
www.hornesystemstx.com
-- We support Habitat for Humanity - a hand UP, not a hand OUT --
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