Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Caps In Series
#1

If you put two .04ufd caps in series you'll get a .02ufd cap. But what happens to their 630 volt rating?

Pepper

"It's Nice To Be Nice To The Nice"
Major Frank Burns Mash 4077th
#2

It becomes 1260V rating. In theory and more or less in practice.

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.
#3

uh, I didn't think the voltage rating changed.
#4

Yes it did.

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.
#5

Hey Peper,
Long time no post!
Good to hear from you.

Terry
#6

Morzh,
You're right.  Oops, I was thinking parallel, not series. Icon_redface
#7

(12-08-2015, 09:39 PM)Art Hoch Wrote:  Morzh,
You're right.  Oops, I was thinking parallel, not series. Icon_redface

 Parallel you double up on the capacity, but the voltage stays the same. I can't remember the physics about why you can connect caps in series to double the voltage rating, but I'm glad that you can, and it works, and have taken advantage of this principle many times. I'm sure that Mike can explain the why, but then again I could just look it up.
Regards
Arran
#8

Arran

The physics is simple: two caps of equal capacitance in series will get charge to exact half the charge each hence the voltage being Q/C, it will therefore be 1/2 voltage across each.
Obviously for exact voltage rating doubling you need exact same two caps.

The half charge is explained by the fact that the same current goes through both caps and so both charge equally.

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.




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
AC/DC Transformer-less Sets
Fantastic report, Mr. Fixr! I had never read about AC/DC sets originally running at a higher price than AC-only models, ...jrblasde — 01:21 PM
49-504
Also wheni first power on the 7a8 gets very bright more than normal not sure what I did wrongphilco4me — 12:53 PM
49-504
Hello all I am doing a 49-504 and in section 4 I see C401is that a 5mmf ? I did not see that when I replaced the caps. ...philco4me — 12:47 PM
Looking for place to donate unique Philco Philco J-1930 Prototype
Thx for the description. I thought that it had to have a single 10 - 12" Sensor. Congrats on restoring the GE and...MrFixr55 — 10:12 AM
AC/DC Transformer-less Sets
Some of the original Edison DC generators were in use until the 1940s. The NYC subway and electrified Long Island Rail ...MrFixr55 — 09:39 AM
Samlex heavy-Duty bench supply filter question
I suggest sticking with the original values. Depending upon the design if you increase the cap values too much the incre...DaleHCook — 08:55 AM
AC/DC Transformer-less Sets
You’re welcome! I was born in 1995, so this is all second-hand information to me from the industry. I did some research ...jrblasde — 08:38 AM
Samlex heavy-Duty bench supply filter question
Hello Everyone, I have one of my Heavy-duty bench powersuplies made by Samlex it's 13.8 volt dc 20-25 amp supply. What I...radiorich — 11:24 PM
Looking for place to donate unique Philco Philco J-1930 Prototype
It's a Glaser Sears changer which Philco's engineers thought was an upgrade over a VM, but in retrospect I'd prefer the ...jeibner — 10:39 PM
AC/DC Transformer-less Sets
Joseph, Thank you for the confirmation. I knew that there must be more to the Transformer-less AC/DC radios than the ...PeterN — 10:30 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently no members online.

>