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zappy:
A typical digital voltmeter has a 10 megohm input resistance with a small amount of shunt capacitance.
A Simpson 260 or 270 on the 250 V range is 25,000*250 = 6.25 megohms.
One megohm = 1,000,000 ohms.
If the Wiggy was considered a pure resistance, which it is not, then 1000 ohms at 120 V would be 14,400/1000 = 14.4 W of power dissipation. That is a lot of power in a small space. Because the coil in the Wiggy has a substantial amount of inductance the dissipating resistance can be less than 1000 ohms while the circuit impedance could be 1000 ohms. My off hand guess is that if the AC impedance was reduced to 100 ohms there would be an excessive amount power dissipation.
I tried a Google search for a Wiggy impedance specification. SqD's page did not work. I did not find what I was looking for. But ran across the following that is sort of funny.
http://www.pumpsonline.com/electrical.htm
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Thank you. I was wondering what's the 25000 stand for?