Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems.

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Default Magnetron replacement,, (substitution)

I have a large Kenmore over the stove type microwave oven that started growling last week. We pulled it apart and found that the magnetron had a short between anode and filament. The diode and cap both check good. The cap is a 1.05uf 2100V unit. I have several new magnetrons in stock meant for comparable GE over the stove units. I don't know what value of cap is used with these though. In my travels I have seen caps as low as .90uf. If the GE mag is the same physical size and mounts the same as the bad Kenmore does what would be the harm in using it if the present 1.05uf cap in the Kenmore were a different value from what the GE calls for? Thanks for any input. Lenny
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On Saturday, October 12, 2013 10:23:47 PM UTC-4, wrote:
I have a large Kenmore over the stove type microwave oven that started growling last week. We pulled it apart and found that the magnetron had a short between anode and filament. The diode and cap both check good. The cap is a 1.05uf 2100V unit. I have several new magnetrons in stock meant for comparable GE over the stove units. I don't know what value of cap is used with these though. In my travels I have seen caps as low as .90uf. If the GE mag is the same physical size and mounts the same as the bad Kenmore does what would be the harm in using it if the present 1.05uf cap in the Kenmore were a different value from what the GE calls for? Thanks for any input. Lenny


I hadn't considered the heater voltage. I guess I figured that they would all be identical. Isn't it generally around two volts? Is there an easy way, or site where I might compare mag. Specs? This tube is real bear to replace. The oven was literally built around the magnetron. I would hate to open the filament on the new tube the fist time I fired it up. Lenny
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On Saturday, October 12, 2013 10:23:47 PM UTC-4, wrote:
I have a large Kenmore over the stove type microwave oven that started growling last week. We pulled it apart and found that the magnetron had a short between anode and filament. The diode and cap both check good. The cap is a 1.05uf 2100V unit. I have several new magnetrons in stock meant for comparable GE over the stove units. I don't know what value of cap is used with these though. In my travels I have seen caps as low as .90uf. If the GE mag is the same physical size and mounts the same as the bad Kenmore does what would be the harm in using it if the present 1.05uf cap in the Kenmore were a different value from what the GE calls for? Thanks for any input. Lenny




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"dave"

Electrolytics are often signaificantly over their rated capacity.


** Completely irrelevant.


The difference between 0.9uF and 1.05uf is electrically insignificant.


** Not in a microwave oven it ain't.



.... Phil


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dave wrote:

Electrolytics are often signaificantly over their rated capacity. The
difference between 0.9uF and 1.05uf is electrically insignificant.



The caps in a microwave HV circuit are oil filled, not electrolytic.


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On 13/10/2013 23:49, Phil Allison wrote:
"dave"

Electrolytics are often signaificantly over their rated capacity.


** Completely irrelevant.


The difference between 0.9uF and 1.05uf is electrically insignificant.


** Not in a microwave oven it ain't.

Interesting. Took some time on Google to find out why. I had wondered
why the capacitances were so carefully stated over a very limited range,
and why the tolerance was so tight at +/- 3%.

For anyone interested, the answer appears to be here in section 9.5
(assuming it's correct):
http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/F_micfaq7.html

By the way, if you want a laugh (and possible pair of future Darwin
award winners), have a look at the fourth paragraph of section 8.21!

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Jeff
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On 10/14/2013 06:06 AM, Jeff Layman wrote:
On 13/10/2013 23:49, Phil Allison wrote:
"dave"

Electrolytics are often signaificantly over their rated capacity.


** Completely irrelevant.


The difference between 0.9uF and 1.05uf is electrically insignificant.


** Not in a microwave oven it ain't.

Interesting. Took some time on Google to find out why. I had wondered
why the capacitances were so carefully stated over a very limited range,
and why the tolerance was so tight at +/- 3%.

For anyone interested, the answer appears to be here in section 9.5
(assuming it's correct):
http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/F_micfaq7.html

By the way, if you want a laugh (and possible pair of future Darwin
award winners), have a look at the fourth paragraph of section 8.21!


"Therefore, I would say that using a capacitor with up to a 10-15%
difference (either way) in uF rating is probably acceptable but a closer
match is better."

Any capacitor can be significantly larger than its label says. Oil
filled or otherwise. BTW: I have worked on UHF cavity amplifiers up to
44KW, with the entire -33KVdc beam supply in an oil filled vault. I'm
not trying to get in a peeing competition.



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"dave"

Any capacitor can be significantly larger than its label says.



** Huh ??

Has this guy never heard of tolerance bands ?

Most film capacitors are rated at 10% tolerance but test much better.

Film caps with 1% tolerance are available and they are darn accurate.


..... Phil


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"Jeff Layman"
Phil Allison wrote:

The difference between 0.9uF and 1.05uf is electrically insignificant.


** Not in a microwave oven it ain't.

Interesting. Took some time on Google to find out why. I had wondered
why the capacitances were so carefully stated over a very limited range,
and why the tolerance was so tight at +/- 3%.

For anyone interested, the answer appears to be here in section 9.5
(assuming it's correct):
http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/F_micfaq7.html



** That explanation is highly simplistic.

A crucial thing with a microwave oven is that the current drawn from the HV
transformer is the same on both half cycles of the AC supply - otherwise
the iron core saturates and that would blow the AC fuse.

On one half cycle, the transformer charges the film cap and on the next the
magnetron draws current from the cap and the transformer in series. There is
also series resonance between the cap and the transformer, due to its very
high leakage inductance.

Taken together, this explains why microwave ovens are made to suit the local
AC supply frequency.

BTW:

If you examine the AC current draw of a microwave oven, it is a pretty good
sine wave - remarkable considering what the load inside is like.


.... Phil






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"Phil Allison" writes:




** That explanation is highly simplistic.


A crucial thing with a microwave oven is that the current drawn from the HV
transformer is the same on both half cycles of the AC supply - otherwise
the iron core saturates and that would blow the AC fuse.


Wouldn't it make more sense to use a switcher supply now-a-daze?
The ovens I've seen had large ergo $$$ transformers.


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"David Lesher"


** That explanation is highly simplistic.


A crucial thing with a microwave oven is that the current drawn from the
HV
transformer is the same on both half cycles of the AC supply - otherwise
the iron core saturates and that would blow the AC fuse.


Wouldn't it make more sense to use a switcher supply now-a-daze?


** Nope.

The ovens I've seen had large ergo $$$ transformers.



** Made in China for about $1 or $2 each and normally way outlast the rest
of the oven.

Any 1kW SMPS that does the same job is gonna cost 20 times more and be the
first thing to fail.



.... Phil







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On Saturday, October 12, 2013 10:23:47 PM UTC-4, wrote:
I have a large Kenmore over the stove type microwave oven that started growling last week. We pulled it apart and found that the magnetron had a short between anode and filament. The diode and cap both check good. The cap is a 1.05uf 2100V unit. I have several new magnetrons in stock meant for comparable GE over the stove units. I don't know what value of cap is used with these though. In my travels I have seen caps as low as .90uf. If the GE mag is the same physical size and mounts the same as the bad Kenmore does what would be the harm in using it if the present 1.05uf cap in the Kenmore were a different value from what the GE calls for? Thanks for any input. Lenny


Thanks for the great explanation of how the oven works Phil. I figured there was a resonance factor associated with this but wasn't completely sure. So then can I surmise that a different cap shifts resonance slightly and then does that affect maximum power transfer to the load, (Tube)? And then while we're at it, it occurred to me that the food must be the tube load, (output). I'm trying to understand this better so is at least part of that correct? Lenny
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