Many thanks for your replies. I am going to quote all of the interesting points.
That link seems to be broken, but I assume you have a high voltage MOSFET.
In a multi-transistor load, give each FET its own sense resistor and opamp. That way you force equal current (and therefore power) sharing.
You can boost the drive voltage and current of an opamp with an external power stage, but I doubt you need it. Use a chunky BJT based opamp and you should have no problem. The NE5532 for one can supply plenty of current and operates off of a 30 volt supply. It isn't rail-to-rail so you need a split supply to go down to zero current, but you could run it off of +25/-5 supply if you needed that last few volts to drive the MOSFET.
If a FET blows short circuit, you find out if you sized your fuse appropriately
IXTK8N150L is the fat I have chosen. It's a high voltage Vds, tested in the linear region. Of course I will have a seperate gate-drive circuit for each mosfet. I came into thermal runaway problems with the first e-load I designed with 10 TO220 mosfets in parallel (Short answer: It had to be tested yesterday and that was all I had in my drawer).
Would it be better if I use a capaciatve load driving opamp or just stick to something normal with some resistance in series with the gate? Obviously I plan on simulating this with bode plots etc.
If you only need to operate over a limited voltage range, look at dumping some of the power in one or more resistors
I was thinking of dumping some resistance in the drain side of the mosfet, just to drop some volts. Normally we create loads with big panel resistors and FET switches, but obviously this requires calibration, is generally nasty and will not work with a changing voltage.
If you are really scared of this, how about redundancy? Just have an extra short circuited rated IGBT on the bottom, normally full on but slammed off in case of a short circuit, will be faster than a fuse (but obviously not a complete replacement).
I've been thinking a high-voltage FET or IGBT always on with a crowbar type latching circuit on the gate. As well as a fuse. I don't really want these £20 silicon devices blowing up, I don't want to have to change them every 5 minutes :-)...
IXYS does make a few 1.5kV linear fets they aren’t cheap though, cheaper probably to just get 3 to 5 of these. I’ve gotten 80W out of the TO-3P package with a relatively modest heat sink and about a 40CFM fan blowing on it.
For the voltage you can get away with large source resistors and put a 20W or so resistor on the drain of each leg.
That sounds like a good plan to me.. I was thinking the linear-mode fets would be the best option as they are designed to work in that region rather than fully slammed on. With this kind of voltage I don't want anything to go wrong if I can help it!
What about a series string of incandescent bulbs PWMed at a relatively low frequency?
Not really possible, same with valves or transformers. I can see my boss laughing in my face if I propose dumping the power as light
.