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WEBPA
 
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WEBPA wrote:


My only hint is that the (main) capacitor in a strobe light is quite

capable of
killing you.


Thanks, but may years ago I got a shock from a 400uf capacitor charged
to 450 volts. From hand to hand. It made me tremble for MANY
minutes. I've been really careful since then.


It can also irreversably remove a finger or two.


How? There's not that much charge in a 100uf 300V capacitor.


Probably not in your specific case...but in a previous life, I was a military
corpsman on an Air Force base (among other places). There I learned that one of
the interesting things radar repaimen sometimes do is stick their fingers
between the leads of rather large capacitors. To make a long story short: In
six months, we had two folks arrive at the emergency room with 10 fingers
attached, 9 working. The 10th was usually removed fairly quickly to prevent
gangrene. Seems even a fairly low energy capacitor, given enough sweat on the
skin, can destroy most of the blood vessels in a finger.

It is also capable of exploding like a blasting cap or 1/4 stick of

dynamite and spraying
molten aluminum and boiling caustic liquids around the room.


Now come on! Every electrolytic made since 1938 has some overpressure
release vent in the rubber end plug or score marks on the aluminum
case. I've blown a few electrolytics in my time and they all just made
a mild hiss and a bad smell. Nowhere near the pyrotechnics you
suggest!


Again, didn't know the size of your capacitor, but I've still got a couple of
old Honeywell strobes in my attic that have much bigger caps. And one I saved
for parts after it exploded on my workbench and started a fire across the room
where the molten aluminum hit a pile of plastic boxes. Granted, there are
pressure relief devices built in, and they usually work...but every few million
(what...a week's global production?) or so it ain't going to work.


( except if you insert the cap leads into the AC line plug, then you do
get a bit more fun ). But we're not doing that.


Glad to hear you're not doing that on purpose.

Regards,

grg


I think I'll just closr up the case and be glad I didnt fry anything
else. C amera works fine when in normal light.



If the camera has an external flash connection (some do...most don't), you may
still be able to work in the dark.
webpa