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Re: Power Factor Capacitor -- Was -- RE: schematics...AdamSmith's
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To: tesla@pupman.com
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Subject: Re: Power Factor Capacitor -- Was -- RE: schematics...AdamSmith's
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From: "Ed Phillips" <evp@pacbell.net> (by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla@uswest.net>)
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Date: Sun, 27 Feb 2000 12:46:02 -0700
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Approved: twftesla@uswest.net
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Delivered-To: fixup-tesla@pupman.com@fixme
Tesla List wrote:
>
> Original Poster: "Bunnykiller" <bigfoo39@idt.net>
>
> > Actually, I've been told that Aluminum Electrolytic will work for a 120VAC
> > PFC cap. These are inexpensive and very common. And to head off criticism
> > that Aluminum electrolytic caps shouldn't be used in an AC circuit, I was
> > told by an Electrical Engineer (Technician?) who runs all the electrical
> > labs here at school. He said that electrolytics can take the AC, just
not a
> > constant negative DC bias.
> >
> > Mark
>
> hi Mark...
>
> weird ... several years ago i took a 220 WVDC @ 3500 uF electrolytic
> cap and placed 120V AC across it guess what happened .... I'll
> never do that again ... it was smelly smokey and LOUD ...
>
> Scot D
Only way electrolytics will work at all on AC is to connect them in
series opposing (- to - or + to +). Even then the losses will be high
and the actual capacitance value uncertain and variable. "Motor
starting electrolytics" do just that, but are only good for a few
seconds of operation at a time. Bottom line is that they are NO GOOD AT
ALL for power factor correction, and that they do indeed smell lousy
when they explode.
Ed