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Re: Awesome Quarter Shrinking Capacitors on EBAY
Original poster: John <fireba8104-at-yahoo-dot-com>
HI,
Jim
It is definitely MFD = 1E-3 Farad. This may be a custom cap, considering
the branch of electronics this man is in. I blow up wire and precises of
metal with this thing. I have to use a plate to discharge it because it
destroys any resistors I try to use.
I wish I knew where he got this cap from. If I did there is no drought I
would buy more.
I have only come up with two sources that sell similar caps 1.)
<http://www.plasticcapacitors-dot-com/>http://www.plasticcapacitors-dot-com and 2.)
<http://www.herbach-dot-com/>www.herbach-dot-com. Note: I don't think this cap came
from either of these sources I am only presenting them as some indirect
proof that caps with voltage and capacitance ratings do exist at around
this size. I'll see if I can post some pictures
Tesla list <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com> wrote:
Original poster: "Jim Lux"
Almost certainly MFD = 1E-6 Farad.. i.e. microfarad. millifarad is almost
never used as a unit.. microfarad, nanofarad, picofarad and micromicrofarad
I've seen..
Oil filled metal can really starts to look like 4 microfarads at 4 kV...
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tesla list"
To:
Sent: Tuesday, October 07, 2003 8:04 PM
Subject: Re: Awesome Quarter Shrinking Capacitors on EBAY
> Original poster: John
>
> Hello,
> This capacitor is not a electrolytic or a cap bank.
> It is in an oil filled metal can with large white ceramic insulators.
> I am not sure what kind of dielectric, but I believe it to be a type of
> plastic.
> The exact wording on the side of the cap reads as follows:
> KN128
> 4MFD
> 4000VAC
> I was unsure as to weather this was Milli or Micro. My hopes were
confirmed
> when I asked the man who gave it to me, a professional electrical
> engineer.(0.004). I think it's from
> http://www.plasticcapacitors-dot-com, after
> all he is a customer.
> Cheers,
> John
>
> Tesla list wrote:
> Original poster: "Jim Lux"
>
> Indeed.. you're right, I missed the missing u... But, then, a 4000 uF cap
at
> 4kVAC rating.. Hmmm. maybe in the form factor cited, but not going to be a
> high current device. Almost certainly a stack of electrolytics, which then
> casts doubt on the VAC rating, as opposed to VDC...
> Say, then, two 8000 uF 4kV DC electrolytics in series? I've got some
> 250,000 uF 400 V electrolytics in a form factor comparable to what's
> quoted.. But, to g! et 4 kV, means 10 in series, for 25 uF... For 4kV AC,
> that's 12 uF, and would be a LOT bigger than a Simpson, but, not orders of
> magnitude.
>
>
> I think though, that we could agree that this is NOT something with high
> pulse current capability.
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Tesla list"
> To:
> Sent: Fri! day, October 03, 2003 8:35 PM
> Subject: Re: Awesome Quarter Shrinking Capacitors on EBAY
>
>
> > Original poster: Mddeming-at-aol-dot-com
> >
> > In a message dated 10/3/03 6:42:16 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
> > tesla-at-pupman-dot-com writes:
> > Original poster: Jim Lux
> >
> > At 03:47 PM 10/3/2003 -0600, you wrote:
> > >Original poster: John
> > >I have a 0.004F cap rated at 4000VAC (32,000 jolues) that is only a
bit
> > >smaller than my simpson 260 multimeter.
> >
> &g!
t; That's 32 millijoules, not 32kJ... .004 * 4*4/2 = 32E-3...
> >
> > Look again. he said 0.004F NOT .004 uF! If he's right, your calculation
is
> > off by 10e6
> >
> > Matt D.
> >
>