User Manual
Rheostat 
See also: Liquid rheostat 
Charles Wheatstone's 1843 rheostat with a metal and a wooden cylinder 
Charles Wheatstone's 1843 rheostat with a moving whisker 
The most common way to vary the resistance in a circuit is to use a rheostat. The 
word rheostat was coined about 1845 by Sir Charles Wheatstone, from the 
Greek ῥέος rheos meaning "stream", and -στάτης -states (from ἱστάναι histanai, " to set, to cause to 
stand") meaning "setter, regulating device",
[6][7][8]
 which is a two-terminal variable resistor. The term 
"rheostat" is becoming obsolete,
[9]
 with the general term "potentiometer" replacing it. For low-power 
applications (less than about 1 watt) a three-terminal potentiometer is often used, with one terminal 
unconnected or connected to the wiper. 
Where the rheostat must be rated for higher power (more than about 1 watt), it may be built with a 
resistance wire wound around a semicircular insulator, with the wiper sliding from one turn of the 
wire to the next. Sometimes a rheostat is made from resistance wire wound on a heat-resisting 
cylinder, with the slider made from a number of metal fingers that grip lightly onto a small portion of 
the turns of resistance wire. The "fingers" can be moved along the coil of resistance wire by a sliding 
knob thus changing the "tapping" point. Wire-wound rheostats made with ratings up to several 
thousand watts are used in applications such as DC motor drives, electric welding controls, or in the 
controls for generators. The rating of the rheostat is given with the full resistance value and the 
allowable power dissipation is proportional to the fraction of the total device resistance in circuit. 
Electronic Symbol for rheostat 









