@Ash
I am aware that CWA is pretty much a fixed impedance when running at a fixed voltage load, and yes impedance this is easy to calculate. But I want to be able to know all of it's possible range of impedances at all of the voltages that could be on it. I want to make it into an equation. Preferably this would not be through load testing, but if that is what must happen then I have no choice.
I was thinking of load testing my two CWA ballasts to see their specs, just as I have done for my HX ballast. When I did it with my HX ballasts, I used the output terminals of an old Variac as a load (variable inductive load). This worked fine, starting at a short circuit and making my way up the windings of the variac. Unsurprisingly when I tried this with CWA, working my way up from a dead short on the Variac actually increased the measured current, because of the capacitor acting as the primary impedance.
Do you have any other suggestions to be able to load test a CWA ballast and get it's characteristics, or ways to calculate instead of load testing? Could I use various different value capacitors as a load (I have countless)? I don't really want to shell out a bunch of money for a Variac-sized wirewound pot just to do this. I only have a lamp for one of my two CWA ballasts, and I really don't want to have to use it because it is very temperamental.
I was not aware that CWA OCV wasn't sinusoidal, that is news to me. I can't even begin to imagine why that is the case.
If I do get these current/voltage points somehow, I will likely plot it on a graph in Desmos so I can have it make the equation of best fit for it. Then I can actually use the data.