dumpsterdiver
New Member
As I "mess around" with mostly consumer electronics I have often seen small capacitors across the diodes in bridge rectifiers. What are these caps for?
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As I "mess around" with mostly consumer electronics I have often seen small capacitors across the diodes in bridge rectifiers. What are these caps for?
A different reason for putting capacitors across power rectifiers:
Here is the power supply schematic of my HF RF amp. Note the capacitors across the HV rectifiers. They are there to equalize the PIV on the non-conducting half of the rectifiers that might occur if a line transient happens. Without them, the rectifier with the lowest junction capacitance in the string could have its PIV exceeded by the transient...
dumpsterdiverAs I "mess around" with mostly consumer electronics I have often seen small capacitors across the diodes in bridge rectifiers. What are these caps for?
Hmm, seem by to make clean DC out instead of clean transients.
seem be, not seem by as I posted. I mean across capacitor make clean DC out.Hi Nikolai,
Your meaning is not clear. Can you explain what you mean?
spec
Restraining orders from trash bins??? Sounds like they want you to "skip" on bye!dumpsterdiveryou would be skipdiver in the UK. I am under treatment at the moment and must not go any closer then 100 yards to a skip (dumpster).
I was referring to the small value caps that are in paralell with each of the 4 diodes in a rectifier bridge. I have also often seen the caps and MOVs you mentioned along with some inductors between feed-in and transformer primary.They clean up any transients in the AC line.
Sometimes there is a disk that looks like a capacitor but it is actually a transient voltage suppressor. Kind of an instantaneous fuse for over-voltage transients.
In either case, they are to clean up the incoming AC. Usually between mains feed-in and transformer primary. I haven't seen them between the transformer secondary and bridge.
Note: if they are placed after the bridge, then they are called filter capacitors to convert the freshly rectified AC camel humps to a flatter DC.
Does that answer your question or is there another configuration that you are trying to describe? If so, a schematic would help a lot.
I have an egregious example of what you are talking about. I found a Sanyo LCD analog TV in the trash with no power supply (a brick like a laptop uses). Research showed it needed 12V at an amp or two. Used the 12v output of a PC power supply and it worked great. Ordered a replacement with the proper connector from eBay and it works but it radiates loads of interference. It was a cheapo switching type so there are probably no caps on the diodes or other suppression devices.Capacitors across rectifier diodes have nothing to do with transients on the AC line. The rectifier diodes switch between conducting and not conducting very fast which produces "buzz" on the DC power supply voltage and the buzz radiates to nearby wiring and radio inputs. The capacitors slow the rectifier switching speed and prevent the buzz. I saw the capacitors on European audio products 45 years ago.
dumpster,I have an egregious example of what you are talking about. I found a Sanyo LCD analog TV in the trash with no power supply (a brick like a laptop uses). Research showed it needed 12V at an amp or two. Used the 12v output of a PC power supply and it worked great. Ordered a replacement with the proper connector from eBay and it works but it radiates loads of interference. It was a cheapo switching type so there are probably no caps on the diodes or other suppression devices.
I did check out the voltage and current ratings of the TV and PSU before I bought the PSU. It has a unique ( to me at least) 4 pin connector so I looked for units specifically made for that line of Sanyo LCD Tvs.dumpster,
You can't necessarily say that the Ebay PSU is deficient, it may just not be comparable with the TV. Of course it may be deficient. (does this make sens?)
I did check out the voltage and current ratings of the TV and PSU before I bought the PSU. It has a unique ( to me at least) 4 pin connector so I looked for units specifically made for that line of Sanyo LCD Tvs.
When working on things fairly late at night I would listen to AM talk radio. The computer supply caused no interference even close to the receiver. The eBay PSU caused interference from across the room 15 feet away. It runs the TV with no problems.
I did check out the voltage and current ratings of the TV and PSU before I bought the PSU. It has a unique ( to me at least) 4 pin connector so I looked for units specifically made for that line of Sanyo LCD Tvs.
When working on things fairly late at night I would listen to AM talk radio. The computer supply caused no interference even close to the receiver. The eBay PSU caused interference from across the room 15 feet away. It runs the TV with no problems.
dumpster,The unit is sealed up with a glued plastic case, so it's not easy to get inside. It seems to run the TV just fine and doesn't get hot -it just radiates hash. I have the PSU and a cable box on a power strip and plug/unplug the PSU when needed since the hash would go beyond the apartment walls. When I plug in there is a spark/pop which indicates a surge to charge filter caps.