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I'm sure this is a newbie question, but when choosing electrolytic capacitors which is a better choice.
I'm repairing an audio generator and the old cap is 20uF @ 350V and I have two options to purchase 22uF @ 350V or 20uF @ 450V, which would you choose?
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22 uF @ 350 VDC is fine. Just make sure it is a good, reputable brand (my preferences are Nichicon or Panasonic).
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Ron Ramirez
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Ron, two follow up questions:
In the example above, you opted for the higher uF vs higher voltage. I’ve heard it’s ok and preferable to go with the higher voltage, but is there a limit on the uF? Lastly, is there a way to definitively identify an e-cap? I found a capacitor rated @ .05uf 600VDC (I thought if it were DC it was an Ecap)
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No, no. I'm no engineer, nor do I play one on TV. And I'm afraid I don't have time right now for a detailed answer, but -
Yes there is a limit on how high you go in uF. 22 uF for 20 is perfectly fine. 200 uF for 20 is too much. In tube rectifier power supplies, you risk causing problems when you go too high in uF so try to keep it as close to original as possible. 450V is OK to replace 350V, but in the case of electrolytics, there really is no need.
Most (if not all) capacitors have a working voltage rated in DC. Some are rated for AC applications (motor start, motor run, "safety" capacitors) and will have an AC rating as well. Just because a capacitor is rated in VDC does not make it an electrolytic.
Mike, Terry...help me out here...
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Ron Ramirez
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Ok, thank you Ron. That eases up some confusion.
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Ron,
You've summed it up pretty much.
I will add this: there are reasons we have different types of capacitors, and even amongst the Al Can Lytics of the same capacitance and voltage one will find several types. And this is even if we only consider one reputable manufacturer, let's say Panasonic or Rubicon, or Nichicon, or Chemi-con.
There are general purpose caps. If one wants to filter voltage where no significant current is drawn (we could suggest as an exampe the SG filtering or plate load filtering RC where the R is in 10s of K and the cap is about 10uF or so), a GP cap will do just fine. It works with huge RC timing, the ripple current is pretty much non-existent and at these parameters its ESR, or ESL are immaterial. This is where a $0.20-0.30 GP aluminum cap of an appropriate voltage will do just fine and there is no reason to buy anything more expensive.
Then there is a rectifier filter. This is where there is a lot of ripple, as the cap handles constant quick charge-discharge at a significant rate. This is where one might want a high ripple current rated aluminum cap (yes, a film cap of the same capacitance and voltage will also do but if the space is of importance, Panasonic makes some of the best high ripple caps).
There are also Low ESR caps. Low ESR naturally goes with high ripple rating, but there are caps optimised for ripple, or for ESR. Often interchangeable, if the reuirements are especially stringent, it is then best to look for the parameter in question.
Low ESR is often needed where low ripple voltage should be provided at high ripple current, such as at a Switching DCDC converter power supply output. The reason is the inductance at the output provides for triangular (sawtooth) shaped ripple current and the ripple voltage is simply Ir*ESR, so the lower the ESR the less the voltage ripple. This is why the low voltage output caps in DCDC supplies are usually exceptionally good with ESR down to 3-4 mOhms, and then parallelled if even better result is desired. So this is not the capacitance on its own that provides for the low ripple output but the low ESR.
Now, when speaking of Voltage rating vs Capacitance, as Ron has explained, the capacitor that directly filters a tube rectifier's output is limited in capacitance by the tube's specifications. Often this is below 40uF.
Also, increasing the capacitance of this particular cap even withit specs against the original value of the schematic will increase the output voltage making the tubes run hotter. Which we do not want.
To add to this, larger capacitance dictates the size increase.
So does higher voltage.
Higher voltage is preferable as it increases reliability. Also for the same type capacitor larger voltage corelates with better ripple current rating.
But due to the size increase it is not always possible to increase the voltage.
What Ron said I also confirm: 22uF in place of 20uF is just fine. One reason being, this is within the tolerance of 20uF caps and the schematic is created to tolerate the cap with +/-25% capacitance as those were (and still often are) the factory specs for most caps.
And the higher voltage....well, I just had addressed that.
In the end, the electrolytics are by design a limited lifetime component, and if the size and space allow, it is good to replace them with good film capacitors as they have comparable or better ripple ratings and are practically immortal and even self-healing. Unfortunately, this is 1) not always possible (especially if one rebuilds a multiple section electrolytic having to stuff more than one cap inside the can) and 2) fairly expensive, a good film cap of a few microfarads capacitance going for a few dollars apiece with the electrolytics, even high ripple ones, being under a buck.
Well, pretty much it.
People who do not drink, do not smoke, do not eat red meat will one day feel really stupid lying there and dying from nothing.
(This post was last modified: 10-24-2019, 04:43 PM by morzh.)
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Thanks for the help and all the good information!
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Thanks Mike for the more detailed answer.
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Ron Ramirez
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Thank you for the info, much of which has cleared up any questions I had. Some of it I will need to digest and review but it's all good stuff. Thanks so much for taking the time to clarify things (and to you too Ron)
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