Building Nichrome Wire Dew Heaters: Build Heaters Using 330 Ohm Resistors
Building Nichrome Wire Dew Heaters: Build Heaters Using 330 Ohm Resistors
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This information is provided for those with the proper electrical knowledge to build 12
Volt telescope dew heaters using Nichrome wire. If you do not have such knowledge
then you should build heaters using 330 Ohm resistors. These heaters can produce
almost twice the required watts of heat so they must be used with a controller to
regulate the amount of heat. They are intended to be used with a 13.8VDC Power Supply
or 12V Battery (13.8V when fully charged), higher voltage will overheat and damage
them, lower voltage may not produce enough heat. I will offer no advice on modifying
these heaters for other voltages or applications, try searching the internet for alternate
heater plans.
Mark Kaye's instructions for building heaters with Nichrome wire cover the construction details
but leave it up to the builder to determine the electrical aspects such as minimum wire length
and desired resistance value (Ohms) for your particular telescope or eyepiece. The instructions
below will insure the wattage is consistent with a commercial heater of the same size and
allows using a mix of Nichrome heaters, 330 Ohm resistor heaters, and commercial heaters.
These instructions assume you are familiar with my instructions for building heaters with 330
Ohm resistors, if not you should review them first for general concepts. This page only covers
aspects of Nichrome wire, refer to my building heaters with 330 Ohm resistors and Mark Kaye's
instructions for information on how to assemble the heaters.
Building Nichrome wire heaters involves calculating the desired resistance and then using parallel
lengths of Nichrome wire to obtain that resistance. You can obtain Nichrome wire out of an old
blow dryer, toaster, heating pad, etc. It can also be purchased from companies such as Jacobs. Do
not cut any pieces of Nichrome wire until you get to step 7. These instructions deal with very
low resistance values so it is important to subtract the resistance in the ohmmeter leads from the
reading on the meter. Touch the meter leads together to measure the lead resistance. Subtract this
lead resistance from every measurement taken in the following instructions. For example if
touching the leads together reads 0.5 ohms, then a piece of Nichrome wire that reads 15.0 ohms is
really only 14.5 ohms. It is also important to understand that the smaller the wire gauge (diameter)
the higher the resistance (Ohms) per Foot. So if you have several different gauges the smallest
gauge will allow shorter lengths for the heater wire.
1. Measure the circumference of what you want your heater to fit in inches. For
example a C11 measures 38 inches.
(Why 190? Because this ratio produces 0.76 Watts per inch of circumference when
operated at 12 Volts matching the wattage of similar commercial heaters )
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operated at 12 Volts, matching the wattage of similar commercial heaters.)
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wire can be cut. If the Nichrome is shorter than this minimum it has too little HEATE
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THIS PAGEso too much current flows and the wire overheats. The wire can
be longer because this increases resistance so less current flows and the
heat is reduced.
3. Without cutting the Nichrome wire, stretch it out and use alligator clips or some other
means of temporarily applying 12 Volts to the full length of the wire (make sure it's
over 30" long). Assuming the Nichrome barely gets warm, move one alligator clip a
few inches closer to shorten the portion of wire the 12 volts is being applied to. Keep
moving it closer until you find a point that feels very warm but not hot enough to melt
anything that contacts the Nichrome wire (be careful not to burn yourself, the wire
may take a few minutes to reach its maximum temperature). In the above example I
found that 30 inches was the shortest piece I could use without it getting too hot. We
do not want the wire to melt the heater strip or any part of the telescope. The shorter
we cut a given piece of Nichrome wire the hotter it will get because the shorter the
wire the less resistance it has and the more current flows through the wire. Now that
we know the minimum length of wire, as long as the wires are this length or longer
the wire will not get too hot.
4. Remove power from the Nichrome wire and touch the meter leads to the places on
the Nichrome wire where the alligator clips were placed in step 3 to measure the
resistance of the minimum length of Nichrome wire. In this example the 30 inch
length of Nichrome wire read 14.0 ohms.
5. Divide the minimum Nichrome wire ohms (step 4) by the desired heater resistance
(step 2) which in this example was 2.8. Increase the result to the next higher whole
number (do not round downward) which in this example was 3. This is the number of
pieces of Nichrome wire you will have to cut, but we do not know the length so do
not cut any Nichrome yet.
6. Multiply the desired heater resistance (step 2) by the number of pieces of Nichrome
wire we will be cutting (step 5). In our example, 5.0 ohms times 3 pieces equals 15.0
ohms.
7. Connect an ohmmeter lead to one end of the Nichrome wire, then move the other
meter lead along the nichrome wire to find the length of Nichrome wire with the
desired resistance (step 6). Cut the wire a little longer and you can trim it later. In
our example, a 32 inch length of Nichrome gave the desired 15.0 ohms so we cut 3
pieces of Nichrome wire 33 inches long and the length will be shortened to 32 inches
when the terminals are installed.
8. Slide each piece of Nichrome wire into heat shrink (such as Mouser 5174-11161) to
prevent the wires from touching themselves or any other wires. Test the heater by
applying 12V to the heater (as in step 3) for 10 minutes to insure it does not
melt the material.
NOTE: If the nichrome wire is difficult to get through the heat shrink tubing, first run a
small diameter copper wire through the tubing, then twist the nichrome and copper
wires together and use the copper wire to pull the nichrome through the heat shrink
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wires together and use the copper wire to pull the nichrome through the heat shrink
tubing.
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9. Solder HEATERS
will not stick & POWER
to Nichrome SOURCES
so you must HELP
use crimp & SUPPORT
terminals to connectCONTACT
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nichrome to your copper wires. Common electrical ring terminals work well. Twist the
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nichrome and copper wires together then insert into terminal and crimp. After
crimping, you may solder the connections for even better contact.
10. Construct your heaters so that the Nichrome wires distribute the heat evenly along
the length of the heater as shown below (if portions of the heater contain more the
nichrome than other parts you will have hot spots). Also make sure that no wires can
make electrical contact with each other and short out.
If you only have one long Nichrome wire it can be looped back and forth as shown in
the first illustration. If there is an odd number of passes, use a copper wire to connect
the end of the Nichrome to the opposite end of the heater strip where the wire to the
RCA plug attaches. The copper wire should be covered in heat resistant material so it
won't melt and touch the nichrome wire.
If the Nichrome wires are shorter than the length of your heater then you can stagger
the Nichrome wires and connect them with copper wires as shown in the second
example.
If several parallel Nichrome wires are used and they are longer than the heater length,
then you can put the loops side by side as shown in the third example.
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