Warning - electronics tutorial follows.
A voltage regulator IC takes an input voltage and "cuts it down" to make a precise output voltage. If you connect a resistor to the output, the resistor draws a constant current, because the output voltage is constant. Now for the subtle bit: "seen" from the input, the regulator and resistor draw the same current, regardless of the input voltage. Constant current draw independent of supply voltage is exactly the property I want. And these days, voltage regulators come with a whole lot of "smarts" built-in: high output current, overload protection, and external control.
Micrel makes a family of regulators with 1.26 V output, high output current, and external enable. To make a 1 A load, connect 1.26 ohms between the output and ground.
For 2 A, the resistor is 0.63 ohms, and for 5 A, 0.252 ohms. The main problem is not in coping with the current, but getting the heat out of components. For the higher current loads, the resistor dissipates a lot of heat, and so does the regulator. A big heatsink becomes mandatory. And I need a way of boosting the current without letting the smoke out.
You can "keep the smoke in" with a big power transistor and a low-value resistor. Put the resistor in series with the regulator's output, and connect the transistor across the regulator. The resistor senses the current drawn by the regulator. When the current rises to a certain value, the transistor turns "on" and bypasses the regulator. The regulator is still in control of the situation and holds the voltage across the load constant, it's just that most of the load current now flows through the transistor. In mucking around with this arrangement, I found I needed one booster transistor for every 2 A of load current, thus two for the 5 A load, four for the 10 A load, and eight for the 20 A load. When connecting the transistors in parallel, I needed a half-ohm resistor, one per transistor, to make them share the load equally.
Now came the time to raid the parts bin at work. I had stacks of Jaycar heatsinks left over from a previous project. They come in two halves, and assemble onto an 80 mm fan. At 40 A and 14 V, the load will be dissipating 560 W. This'll place serious demands on the cooling fan. I laboriously mounted the components onto the heatsinks and point-to-point wired the electronics, just like in a valve guitar amp. And then a colleague took a glance at my work and said, "nice job, but it'll work for about half an hour until the PVC insulation goes soft and you get short-circuits." And so I completely rewired it with Teflon-insulated wire.
The 1,2,5 and 10-amp loads worked perfectly. The 20 A load was a bit flaky and would only pull 20 A at some voltages and not at others. And then I could change its behaviour by waving my hands over the circuit. That's the classic symptom of radio-frequency oscillations. In situations like this, the data sheet recommends a bypass capacitor on the voltage regulator's output pin.
The final touch was to make covers for the unit, which double as cooling ducts. It was not much trouble to bend them up out of sheet metal. And the sheet-metal worker at work is a genius at TIG-welding thin aluminium.
After having done the design and assembly work on the sly as a "foreign order", a colleague needed an electronic load for testing power supplies. Commercial electronic loads all have microprocessors in them and generate radio interference. Mine is purely analog, and doesn't produce interference. So I am now in the curious situation of having a foreign order elevated to "official" status.
Once we had measured the output noise of the power supplies for the new ultra-wideband Parkes receiver, I gave the electronic load a test run with my FX's Delco generator, which I thought was misbehaving. At 20 A load, the generator worked fine. But when I switched the 20 A load off, there was a "cough", and a puff of smoke came out of the heatsinks. The cooling fan didn't appreciate the voltage spike, and promptly blew up. Some more work is needed . . .
I am pleased to offer a generator testing and rebuild service, and I can set up voltage regulators too. One thing I can't do, though, is armature rewinds.
Rob