Submitted by Guilty_Telephone_444 t3_10xcwow in askscience
When a kitchen hob (for example) is on a lower heat setting, the power switches on (full) and off, rather than being modulated on a continuous scale from high to low, like the volume control on an audio amplifier. Why?
LargeGasValve t1_j7tpek1 wrote
it's cheaper and more efficient to use a relay.
They have effectively zero contact resistance, but can switch the current only so fast and only do that so many times before wearing out and are fairly noisy, but even if they fail, they are readily available and easily replaced. This means compromises have to be made on the switching speed
if you wanted to have more granular control you would need power transistors/triacs to be able to switcher the current fast enough to modulate power, these would be more expensive, and less efficient, wasting power and requiring heat sinks for the components and extra circuitry to drive them correctly, increasing costs with no benefit as the food doesn't really care about how power is regulated
induction stoves need high frequency switching to work so they must use electronics, so they always have actual power control rather than "bang-bang" control