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| I am looking for a project to test leakige of electroulytic caps. Can you help me. | |
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| Hi Gregory, I usually charge the cap to a defined voltage and let it rest for a while. Measuring the voltage at regular intervals using a very high impedance voltmeter I plot a curve. If it keeps moving downslope I forget about the cap. Boncuk | |
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| Hi Gregory, If these are old ones, they can usually be re-formed. Stick a current limiting resistor in line, and put it on charge. I normally start at very low currents, with a meter in line for monitoring. Electrolytics do leak a little anyway, but not normally enough to run warm, unless they are intended to run at more than a few hundred volts. Old types running at over three hundred volts would be expected to be warm to the touch, but not actually hot, that would mean excessive leakage and time to investigate. They are chemical units and the leakage changes with the applied voltage so you cant just treat it like a resistor. If these are quite low voltage caps like for small transistor stuff, just hold a little nine volt battery in series with a hand held voltmeter on ten volts, and see that the reading drops. It wont stop reading completely, cos they all leak a bit anyway, even new ones. Best of luck with it, John
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| When you charge a Cap do you charge it with 25 V DC with a low current say 1 Amp. Testing a 250 V cap 220 uf If I only have a DMM do I have to insert a Resistor in series to read the voltage. If the voltage is high. | |
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iJust imagine the impedance of DMM in DC Voltages ranges,and compare your seires resistor that is proposed. Just of no avail.
__________________ Regards, Sarma. | ||
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| Charge the capacitor with the voltage you intend to run it at. Connect a large series resistor, measure the voltage across it and calculate the current using Ohm's law. You could actually use a multimeter as the series resistance. If you know the input impedance then calculating the current is easy. Also note that the leakage current depends on the voltage you charge it to. You can build a circuit that does all of this automatically if you like but you need some way of providing a suitable variable voltage possibly as wide as 3 to 500V depending on what you want to do.
__________________ I also post at the following sites: http://www.stop-microsoft.org http://www.heated-debates.com Screen name: Aloone_Jonez And http://www.silicontronics.com, same screen name as here. | |
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__________________ Regards, Sarma. | ||
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