2200uf 10v cap replace with 6.3v?

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • kc8adu
    Super Moderator
    • Nov 2003
    • 8832
    • U.S.A!

    #21
    Re: 2200uf 10v cap replace with 6.3v?

    might be your rule and having some headroom is great.
    but its common practice even on high reliability/industrial stuff to use 6.3v caps on a 5v line.
    most caps have a surge rating well above the stamped rating.
    good ones can take moderate overvoltage forever due to being designed with some headroom.forget that on cheap and nasty stuff like we often replace!

    Comment

    • 9302z28ss
      Senior Member
      • Jul 2014
      • 57
      • united states

      #22
      Re: 2200uf 10v cap replace with 6.3v?

      is it normal for a cap to read over what it rated for?
      for ex i have a 50v 1000uf cap and its reading 1030-1033uf on my ESR tester i have a few other things also but cant start a new thread for some reason

      Comment

      • Agent24
        I see dead caps
        • Oct 2007
        • 4950
        • New Zealand

        #23
        Re: 2200uf 10v cap replace with 6.3v?

        Originally posted by 9302z28ss
        is it normal for a cap to read over what it rated for?
        for ex i have a 50v 1000uf cap and its reading 1030-1033uf on my ESR tester i have a few other things also but cant start a new thread for some reason
        Yes, capacitors (in fact most, if not all components) are not exactly what they say on the label. Electrolytic capacitors typically have a tolerance of +/-20% which means the value they really are could be as much as 20% higher (or lower) than what they say on the label.

        Bear in mind also that your meter will not be perfectly accurate either - although it should be a lot better than 20%!
        "Tantalum for the brave, Solid Aluminium for the wise, Wet Electrolytic for the adventurous"
        -David VanHorn

        Comment

        • 9302z28ss
          Senior Member
          • Jul 2014
          • 57
          • united states

          #24
          Re: 2200uf 10v cap replace with 6.3v?

          That's good to hear at least I don't need to replace that. I need two 250v 300uf 105c caps they rent yen barrel style about an inch tall and wide and I also need a 50v 470uf about 1/2 in wide and 3/4 in tall anybody have any? Sorry to hijack

          Comment

          • jasonbay13
            Senior Member
            • Jul 2014
            • 185
            • usa

            #25
            Re: 2200uf 10v cap replace with 6.3v?

            so back to this 19" monitor.
            replacing that one bulging cap did make the monitor work, though it has a slight problem;
            certain shades of certain colors result in the pixel actually displaying a different shade. Ex: dark blue (near top right of windows 7 default background) some of the pixels flicker from normal to a darker shade. and gets significantly more noticeable when a uac prompt dims the screen.

            is it possible it is anything besides the capacitors that are causing this?

            Comment

            • Agent24
              I see dead caps
              • Oct 2007
              • 4950
              • New Zealand

              #26
              Re: 2200uf 10v cap replace with 6.3v?

              Possibly you have more than one bad capacitor - they can fail without visible signs. If one was bad, likely the rest are on the way out. Replace them all, especially any the same brand as the one that was blown. It could be that bad power is affecting the signal processing chips

              It could also be a faulty video cable (DVI\HDMI is susceptible to this kind of thing)

              Don't rule out a faulty graphics card unless you have tried another monitor too.

              Might even be a faulty panel in the monitor.
              "Tantalum for the brave, Solid Aluminium for the wise, Wet Electrolytic for the adventurous"
              -David VanHorn

              Comment

              • berniedd
                Senior Member
                • Mar 2007
                • 119

                #27
                Re: 2200uf 10v cap replace with 6.3v?

                Originally posted by stj
                to make a capacitor bulge you either have to run it on it's voltage lmiit or put high rfequency ripple into a cap not designed for it.

                what i posted was something else,
                as a design rule a cap's minimum voltage should be 1.5x the input voltage to allow for the ripple.
                5v x1.5 = 7.5 NOT 6.3 so using a 6.3v cap on a 5v line is asking for trouble down the road.
                I use 6.3 volt quality caps to replace 10 volt-rated ones on 5 volt rails, and I've never had a failure yet even after 4 years of the repair.

                Comment

                Related Topics

                Collapse

                • ssl6
                  MSI K7T266 Pro (Ver. 1.0)
                  by ssl6
                  Hey Everyone,

                  Long time lurker, but I think this is my first time posting.

                  Just looking for some assistance on identifying some suitable replacement capacitors for an MSI K7T266 Pro (Ver. 1.0). I just got my hands on two of them actually, both working but one has some visibly bulging capacitors and the other has a few that I can't tell for sure if they're bulging because it's faint at best if they are.

                  I'll be honest I don't fully understand much on capacitor spec sheets beyond voltage and capacitance but I can solder like nobodies business so I've...
                  11-09-2023, 01:00 PM
                • black6host
                  Replacement caps for Samson Resolv studio monitor 65A Amp board.
                  by black6host
                  Good day!

                  I have a Samson Resolv studio monitor that has no sound output. I've opened it up and found two caps that are bulging on what I believe to be the power supply section of the amplifier board. The board is marked Resolv 65A AMP V1.2. The caps in question are YUSCON, 2200uF, 35V, 85C temp and have markings of RA(P) and are 16mm x 25.5mm tall. I've attached the schematic and the caps in question are C5 and C6. I'm assuming they are low esr caps. I've tested both caps and they test low uF, nowhere near 2200uF.

                  I'm going to replace the caps and I'll be the first...
                  02-06-2024, 08:22 PM
                • howardc64
                  HP Inkjet printer main board bulging cap failure
                  by howardc64
                  Fixed a 10yo HP inkjet with a bulging cap on the digital computer power rails (1 to 5V). Unstable voltages causing these inkjets to not boot properly or crash quickly. Seems like more and more of these are showing up nearing the 10 year mark. Board design seem to look similar for many of these printers.

                  https://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Printi...t/true#M997922
                  02-03-2025, 09:50 PM
                • cloppy007
                  [MSI KT3 Ultra ARU] Advice on capacitor choice
                  by cloppy007
                  I've found out that the all the Nichicon HM(M) caps on this board are faulty and need replacement. However, I didn't plan in advance and I don't have good replacement caps.

                  The original values are 2200uF, 6.3V, 5mm pitch. According to the datasheet, the rated impedance should be around 13-18 uOhms.

                  There are 8 of them, 3 to the left of the CPU socket and 5 on the bottom, very close to the northbridge. They are all connected, according to my multimeter.



                  I think I recall hearing that I don't have to use the same capacitance for in series...
                  08-21-2023, 03:18 PM
                • rattlesnake
                  Soyo SY-7VBA133U recap
                  by rattlesnake
                  Hi guys,
                  I'm going to recap this baby. I found it dumped in the street years ago, and now it's time has come. I remember having tested it and it posted back then.

                  Original caps are bulged and look nasty. All are SACON
                  11 x 1000uF 10v
                  12 x 1500uF 10v
                  1 x 470uF 16v
                  11 x 22uF 25v
                  1 x 10uF 25v

                  The smaller ones look fine. Should I replace them too?

                  I read on another forum that I could replace the 1500uF caps with 2200uF caps. Is that so?
                  The thing is I could get Sanyo 2200uF or Capxon 1500uF (or Jackon 1500uF)....
                  04-10-2022, 06:47 AM
                • Loading...
                • No more items.
                Working...