I believe my 30watt heating cartridge will be sufficient for my needs, and will not tax my dimmer (since it's maximum operating capacity is only 24watts @ 12vdc). Now my question is how reliable are these dimmer switches when running at maximum capacity (full throttle)?
I suggest you rethink this some. Traditional log vapes are 'open loop' devices. Their heaters put out a fixed level all the time and heat builds up to the point that losses (to the outside world) exactly equal the heat produced and the temperature stops building. They are adjusted, by trial and error, to stabilize (reach equilibrium) at the magic temperature. The heat is increased or decreased (but left constant) or the insulation and other factors controlling loss modified as needed to make that happen. It the 'thermal mass' is large relative to the heat needed to vape the stem the temperature stays stable though the hit(s).
And then we have closed loop systems, like say Solo or Ascent. Here a 'too powerful' heater is used which it shut off completely (to let the unit 'coast') or throttled back as needed to keep temperature in check. Such systems heat faster (traditional log vapes can take a long time.....) and provide better control of temperature.
And finally we have vapes like VG where the owner's skill at predicting how high it will go is part of the deal. Again, power is not uniform through the session. "Set and forget" only happens on the closed loop scheme. What I think you're looking at is a user adjustable version of the open loop scheme?
The first order of business is, I think, to determine what range of powers you need to have in your design to span from say 350 to 425F? You're planning on using some existing 30 Watt heater? Fine and good. What resistance/voltage is it?
That information will help decide if your control and load are matched well. You can't go by Watts, really, Ohm's law is in charge (again). Power is the product of voltage and current and resistance is what sets the relationship there.
IMO a closed loop design (with a temperature sensor in the loop) has serious advantages here and should be considered. At the very least I suggest some 'number crunching' before ordering too much stuff. And in the end you'll have an adjustable temperature (of sorts) unit but once you set that it's no different from any other log vape (slow to heat, slow to respond to changes, not very efficient). Closed loop fixes a lot of that.
The short answer is 'you'll never get more than a fraction of the 24 Watts (determined by the resistance) from that 30 Watt heater. Them's the rules.
You know, this conversation is strangely familiar?
OF