I've been wanting to make a DCEL to test some computer PSU's. I have a couple of real schematics that are similar to a lot of the low power ones you'll see. And I would probably combine that with something like Scullom Hobby Electronics DCEL, that and the 2 sch's are both digital.
Last year I tried some big iron sheets as heatsinks, and they can't even dissipate the heat fast enough for 1 fet at 20W. Maybe I was doing something bad to those modfets, or they were knockoff's. But I haven't tried anything since.
Now I have some nice op-amps, but for the cost of all the other parts, like a giant heatsink, I'm back to looking at brand-name ones.
I have a +10yo 1,200W PSU. I should just give up on testing that, I'd need a multi-rail tester built for 2,000W.
But then there's those low voltage, high power heating elements, like 12V 400W, and cheap. IDK if they are really suitable, since I don't see anyone else using heater elements. But for a resistive load, with pass mosfets trying to control it, is that a good or bad idea ? Like if I wanted to test a 750W PSU, may I'd only use 600W of heaters, and the rest could goto just power mosfets on a heatsink.