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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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Tim Watts wrote:
On 06/01/15 06:10, John Robertson wrote: As usual, heat is the enemy. Reading the technical specs for caps is enlightening. They are rated usually at something like 2,000 to 5,000 hours at their rated temperature. So an 80C cap will die after something like 2000 hrs at 80C or 4000 hours at 50C and 10000 hours at 40C (not looking it up!), whereas a 105C cap will last 10000 hours at 85C, etc. So, the better the grade of cap the longer it will last in warm to hot environments. And there is the equivalent resistance and inductance to consider as well. Some caps are much more tolerant of 50/60hz and others are better at 20,000hz. Selecting those takes time and the cost accountants slip in at some point... That's very interesting. Based on this random driver circuit: http://www.ecnmag.com/sites/ecnmag.c...206-web(1).jpg and looking at RS for 680uF around 50V electrolytics: the 105C are around 50-70 pence 125C are around 130 pence 150C are 252 pence There seems to be 1 big cap in that circuit - I don't have time now to cost all of the electrolytics but this looks like a case of adding maybe 3 pounds would make the difference between a short life and a very long life. I suspect Philips use the good components - their LED bulbs seem to last a long time (my tests are still pending) but they cost rather more than 3 pounds over the cheaper LEDs. The things that kill electrolytic capacitors are ripple current and ESR. If you double the capacitor size, the life dramatically increases as the running temperature decreases. I once had a very nice DOS program which forecast capacitor life extremely well based predominantly on ripple current. I see that Ford have had to add cooling fans to their infinite life LED headlamps. I've never yet seen a fan with an infinite life! |
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