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Dear All,
please see the attached picture and please explain the red rectangular area capacitor is used 250v , But we can replaced 160v capacitor
is there any special reason to use 250v cap instead of 160v cap
Please advice
Thanks in advance
What an electrolytic cap doing on a transformer winding?
Seems like you will have to replace it many times in the future.
Good, hi tech Christmas cracker.it because it would explode pretty soon.
that is one strange power supply. What is it for?
This circuit is in a monitor or TV set.What an electrolytic cap doing on a transformer winding?
Hy specHy dayanpad,
The peak voltage on your capacitor will be 1.414 * 110V = 155.54V. Allow 10% for mains fluctuations etc =171.094V and best to run a capacitor at no more than 0.66 of rating =256.50 so the 250V capacitor is the correct rating.
The other point though, is the current rating of the capacitor. If this is lower than the original the new capacitor may over heat and even explode. The resistor in series with the mains supply helps reduce the ripple current though.
So my advice, as the other members have said- get the proper component. I just thought you would like to see the calculations that led to the 250V rating.
Hi ronsThis circuit is in a monitor or TV set.
This is the high voltage/horizontal section.
I can't see every thing but:
The "115V" at the bottom left side is probably power into this section. So there is 115V on the cap. (not AC voltage, yes on AC current) and probably much AC current.
There is a chance that the "115V" is an output. But there would need to be a diode to ground off one of the transformer taps.
Hy spec
Thanks for the detailed reply
In the above attached circuit the 115v is DC voltage from the power supply. therefore is it necessary to consider 1.414 ( Sorry for half image of the CCT)
Please advice further
Thanks in advance
There is a chance that the "115V" is an output. But there would need to be a diode to ground off one of the transformer taps.
Silly meNo chance at all
It's a pretty standard old TV LOPT stage, the 115V comes from the PSU to feed the LOPT.
Silly meBut we didn't have that info when I posted.
Can't seem to find the LopTee on our plasma set- where are they normally fitted these days?
We did
It's blatantly obvious from the circuit he posted![]()
...sarcastic...?...
...there obviously isn't one as there's no CRT so no line or frame stages (Plasma and LCD aren't even scanned devices).