ESR and regular caps?

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • jleon92f
    Member
    • May 2013
    • 20
    • USA

    #1

    ESR and regular caps?

    Hi, Are ESR and regular caps interchangable? Is it important to use ESR caps?

    Thanks,
    John.
  • mariushm
    Badcaps Legend
    • May 2011
    • 3799

    #2
    Re: ESR and regular caps?

    Why would low esr exist if they weren't important?

    Low ESR is an important characteristic of capacitors when these capacitors are used in particular circuits that are designed to require capacitors with low esr.

    In most cases, you can use low esr capacitors in regular circuits that don't require low esr, but it doesn't work the other way around. Circuits that need low esr capacitors mayl be overloaded, may be "stressed", may overheat some components in the circuit, may be "unstable" etc with regular capacitors.

    Comment

    • jleon92f
      Member
      • May 2013
      • 20
      • USA

      #3
      Re: ESR and regular caps?

      Originally posted by mariushm
      Why would low esr exist if they weren't important?

      Low ESR is an important characteristic of capacitors when these capacitors are used in particular circuits that are designed to require capacitors with low esr.

      In most cases, you can use low esr capacitors in regular circuits that don't require low esr, but it doesn't work the other way around. Circuits that need low esr capacitors mayl be overloaded, may be "stressed", may overheat some components in the circuit, may be "unstable" etc with regular capacitors.
      OK, so if I use Low ESR all the time I am OK. I do not have the schematic for the HG281D monitor to tell me what caps are being used.

      Thanks,
      John.

      Comment

      • mariushm
        Badcaps Legend
        • May 2011
        • 3799

        #4
        Re: ESR and regular caps?

        No, if you use Low ESR all the time you're not OK.

        In some places, capacitors with not so low ESR are used to take advantage of the R in the ESR ("Equivalent Series Resistance") - in combination with other parts of the circuit that ESR value can keep the circuit stable.
        If that circuit expects a particular ESR and you use a low ESR capacitor, the circuit may become unstable.

        For example, here's a simple linear regulator, LM2941 : https://cdn.badcaps-static.com/pdfs/...ddde41b832.pdf
        See page 7.
        In order to be stable, this IC requires a capacitor on the output that's at least 22uF in size, but you can use bigger capacitors.

        It has however one quirk : at under 200mA of load, the regulator will be unstable with very low ESR capacitors, whatever capacitor you use needs to have 0.1 ohm or more ESR.

        200mA can be a lot, a microcontroller, a lcd display etc all use 10-50-100 mA so you can't just ignore this and assume the regulator will use more than 200mA all the time.

        So if I make a 5v linear regulator, I could use any capacitor bigger than 22uF and with at least 6.3v rating, but it's smart to use 10v or even more rating, as larger capacitors handle heat better.

        I can't just put a 1000uF 16v Nichicon HM capacitor for example, with about 0.025 ohm ESR because it's much lower than 0.1 ohm. This is a very-low ESR capacitor.

        But I could use a Nichicon HD capacitor, a 100uF 25v capacitor in this series will have about 0.13 ohm ESR, above the 0.1ohm esr required by the IC to get stable output but low enough to not waste too much energy in the capacitor.

        This is technically classified still as an low esr capacitor, but compared to newer series of capacitors, more modern, nowadays it's barely considered low esr.

        Just the same, I couldn't use ceramic capacitors (some kinds, most of the good ones, have esr below 0.1 ohm) or polymer capacitors (most are ultra low esr, usually 0.01 ohm esr or even less).

        You have to search for datasheets of the capacitors you plan to replace, determine what kind of capacitor is, and replace with suitable capacitors.

        Once you repair lots of hardware and you have some practice you start to understand how some circuits you repair work and can determine easily if that capacitor needs to be Low ESR or not so low esr.

        Comment

        • imp
          Senior Member
          • Aug 2010
          • 125
          • Sweden

          #5
          Re: ESR and regular caps?

          An interesting post from you mariushm, as usual It answered several questions I also had about low ESR capacitors and when NOT to use them ...

          Comment

          • ratdude747
            Black Sheep
            • Nov 2008
            • 17136
            • USA

            #6
            Re: ESR and regular caps?

            Moved from FAQ.
            sigpic

            (Insert witty quote here)

            Comment

            • Paddan1000
              Member
              • Mar 2013
              • 17
              • Sweden

              #7
              Re: ESR and regular caps?

              I replaced all the caps at 100uF and lower (I left the 220uF:s) on a V-smile game console PCB with low-ESR caps. Now the game console won't start any games but just shows a blank screen. Could the problem be the low ESR of the new caps?
              The PCB looks like this:

              Comment

              Related Topics

              Collapse

              • momaka
                Seasonic B12 BC-550 – barely 2 years old and with BAD CAPS already!
                by momaka
                I know I've been a little scarce lately (like the last 2-3 years), but I'm still here and still doing my thing with fixing PSUs.

                For today's considerations, I have a Seasonic B12 BC-550 [A551bcafh] 550 Watt ATX power supply for you (click on links for full size images).

                https://www.badcaps.net/filedata/fetch?id=3591771


                https://www.badcaps.net/filedata/fetch?id=3591772

                It's a modern ATX unit with fixed (non-modular) cables and an 80-plus bronze certificate. Here's the label:

                https://www.badcaps.net/filedata/fetch?id=359177...
                03-12-2025, 03:42 PM
              • eryjus
                Heathkit IO-4205 Power Supply Caps
                by eryjus
                Hello,

                First, I am a complete noob with high voltage stuff. I'm learning, but I need help by someone looking over my shoulder.

                I recently came into posession of a Heathkit IO-4205 5MHz Dual Trace Oscilloscope. The documentation is copyright 1978. I'm told it works.

                I opened it up to check the caps before I applied power, and found the following black caps and wanted to know what they were. They are on the power supply board. I was able to read the name and model and came up with, "Nytronics 162J-1, 0.1uF, 20% tolerance, 2000VDC."
                ...
                05-10-2023, 11:21 AM
              • Paxman_Swede
                Identifying caps on an old Zoom 9000
                by Paxman_Swede
                Hello!

                I have two projects on my work bench. One is a friends dead JBL Xtreme speaker with a blown voltage regulator and corresponding bulged and shorted cap. That cap has clear markings so I know what replacement I need for it.

                The other project however is a whole different deal. It's a Zoom 9000 guitar effect from the 90th that has developed a devil hound howl when there is no input from the guitar. I'm guessing caps problem. So, since I don't really use this effect anymore I thought it would be a perfect project to learn on.

                I have studied the board and...
                01-14-2025, 09:51 AM
              • captain150
                Help with switching power supply caps
                by captain150
                I'm trying to repair two old VCRs, they both have bad caps. One has leaky ones, the other would barely run until I subbed in some caps from another power supply I had laying around (though they are the wrong values). This vcr works for an hour or two, but then the power supply starts whining and the picture gets lines in it. I didn't replace all the secondary caps, so another voltage might still be problematic, or the values I used are too far off.
                I've been on mouser and digikey but the options are a bit overwhelming. I just need some new ones that will work. They don't need to be top quality,...
                03-16-2025, 07:34 PM
              • Foetuss
                Gigabyte GA-6OXT :: caps question
                by Foetuss
                Good evening

                I recently aquired a rev 1.1 Gigabyte 60XT, and was suprised of the amount of leaking caps for a motherboard of the P3 era. Especially the way the 330µf caps seems like the housing discolored even.
                Now, there are some 3300µF 6.3V KZG series around the CPU. Would it be OK to replace them with something like EEUFR1A332 ? (Panasonic FR 3300µF 10V). Or was this board designed around very low ESR caps?

                But I was also suprised about the bigger boys, which are 330µF 25V.
                Could it be they used 25V caps because they were cheaper / available at that time?...
                02-11-2025, 12:22 PM
              • Loading...
              • No more items.
              Working...