BUT
if it IS bare wire, then the makers either must keep each turn from
touching the next turn over (with a very small clearance), *OR* the wire
is coated -prior- to the winding process. otherwise, the 'resistance per
turn' wouldn't be controllable - right? I mean like if one turn, near
the middle of a wirewound resistor, was 'shorted' to the next winding
mid-turn...
like in these things:
http://machines.scienceontheweb.net/shocker/photos/photo23.html
wirewound03.jpg
thanks for info, guys :-)
bubba here is kind of contemplating making a rheostat...this recipe
calls for a 6 ohm, 11.1 amp type (see bottom right of page 2)
http://www.countryplans.com/vintage_farm//metalshop/AutoArcWelder.pdf
AutoArcWelder.pdf (application/pdf Object)
of course, i have this ol' powerstat, but it's a 5 amp model
http://machines.scienceontheweb.net/shocker/photos/photo16.html
powerstat07.jpg
I've had several damaged wirewound resistors in which I could see the
wire. There's a gap between each turn, and the lower resistance,
generally the wider the gap because the wire is shorter.