Help with resistive cartridge heater and variable control circuit

Still trying to understand why the diac is a requirement.
It is required for zero crossing control. The heater is a pure resistive load and can be handled by a regular lamp dimmer. Your fan is an inductive load and requiers a different dimmer to run a motor like a celling fan speed controller. It is still a triac but has more stuff for inductive loads mainly a coil. Still much stuff on the web for this stuff google is your friend. Andy
 
I'm no expert on dimmers and speed controls, but I don't think this is the reason diacs are used. I found this on the Electronics and Radio Today site:
I found similar information on several other sites.
 

If you could better explain this project there may be some simple and viable solutions. For example you have a 100 watt cartridge heater element. That can be manually controlled as simply as using a common very inexpensive dimmer switch. Why buy pices and parts?

You mention a fan. If the fan speed is going to be manually controlled possibly a simple F-Stat or button thermostat could be employed to turn a fan on with temperature rise. Unless you absolutely need variable speed and since it would be manual vari-speed I don't see the point?

This would go much better with a more detailed explenation of the overall project.

Ron
 

Google: cartridge heaters
Cartridge and Insertion Heaters for Heat Transfer and Uniform Temperatures in the Heating Element Industry
Cartridge Heaters:
**broken link removed**
SunRod 1/8" and 4mm Cartridge Heaters from Sun Electric Heater
And many more!
Ken
 
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