Yeah, I'd still want one of these inline with a variac, myself. A lot of the time you'll find that once things start turning on in a SMPS, especially the older designs, that's when a short appears. The scariac doesn't stop the magic smoke from coming out then, but rather encourages the switcher transistor to try and sink more current to make up for the lower voltage.
Oh, yeah, sure. I never meant to use a dim bulb tester and variac with modern SMSP stuff, only with old 60's/70's stuff with linear power supplies.
It's really only for the initial power up of old my old tube Tek scopes, so as not to risk frying the transformer and rectifier tubes, and wreckign the scope.. that's all.
For SMPS stuff I just rely on the circuit breaker I added in-line with my test power outlet on the bench.
When I built my dim bulb tester, it was to try and not blow a hundred fuses as I was trying to repair the SMPS PSU in my Tek 2232 scope.
The MOSFET was shorted and sent the PWM controller to heaven, along with all the discrete components around it. Replaced everything but was not too hopeful as that was my first SMPS repair ever, first scope repair ever really. So since I had just leaned about this dim bulb tester thing, I thought hey, great opportunity here, let's build one ! The scope would not power up. The light bulb would literally blink, indefinitely, at a perfectly repeatable/stable frequency. Period of about 2 seconds or so. I though wow strange, what did I do wrong... had no clue, so decided to cross fingers and power the scope without the bulb tester.... scope power up and worked just fine !!
So I learned right away that SMPS don't like dim bulb testers !