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Re: PFC = power factor capacitor?
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To: tesla@pupman.com
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Subject: Re: PFC = power factor capacitor?
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From: "Ed Phillips" <evp@pacbell.net> (by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla@uswest.net>)
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Date: Mon, 14 Feb 2000 20:32:56 -0700
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Approved: twftesla@uswest.net
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Delivered-To: fixup-tesla@pupman.com@fixme
it took me months to learn
> > that ESR meant equivalent series resistance in a capacitor. Does this mean
> > the ohmic resistance eqivalent to its capacitive reactance? Or does it
> > represent the resistance encountered as leakage current?
> > Sure wish the posters could at least say what the letters mean once in a
> > while. HDN
>
> It is actually an "old" abbreviation well known to those in the
> switchmode power supply (SMPS) community. It is an *equivalent*
> resistance wired in series with a "perfect" capacitor that describes
> all resistive losses (dielectric hysteresis, leakage etc.). It is really an
> engineering modelling tool similar to modelling a real transformer as
> a perfect one with a single resistance in series with its windings.
>
> Regards,
> Malcolm
ESR is a term used in my "Radio" handbooks of the '30's.
Ed