Sujet : Re: heating a cap
De : jl (at) *nospam* glen--canyon.com (john larkin)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 04. Oct 2024, 18:31:13
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <0f90gj1ocqo6tm32oe02c9laqukhnp05kj@4ax.com>
References : 1 2
User-Agent : ForteAgent/8.00.32.1272
On Fri, 04 Oct 2024 12:10:38 -0400, legg <
legg@nospam.magma.ca> wrote:
On Thu, 03 Oct 2024 16:36:24 -0700, john larkin <jl@glen--canyon.com>
wrote:
>
I got a small (under 1" long) aluminum electro cap, 220 uF 63v, and
cranked up the voltage. It started drawing a bunch of current at 105
volts, got hot, and folded back to 80 mA at 87v.
>
It got too hot to touch in a couple of minutes, after roughly 500
joules. Freeze spray let it go back up to 100 volts or so.
>
None of that seemed to damage it, so an electrolytic cap sort of has a
built-in MOV.
>
You're not 'heating a cap'.
Felt hot to me.
>
You're applying voltage overstress to failure, using a
current limited source.
But it didn't fail.
>
This tells you precisely nothing.
Told me a lot. Why elect to not learn things?
>
Were you earing safety glasses?
No earrings, and my normal glasses.
>
Are you sure you want to advertize this increasingly
erratic behavior?
Experimenting with parts is admittedly a bizarre thing for an engineer
to do. Sorry.
>
RL