esr of hid lighting caps

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

    #1

    esr of hid lighting caps

    had a cap on the shops hvac blower die.
    its a 10@370.
    had degraded to 6uf.
    caused hard starting of the blower.
    esr of 70mohm.
    had a junk hps fixture with a 10@400 about 5 times the physical size.
    its esr is .23!
    i assume its junk but there is no esr ratings in the datasheets for these caps.
    it made things better till the new one gets here monday.
    i ASSume the larger can is for lower esr and more surface area to dissapate heat.
    anyone have such a cap new and an esr meter?
  • stj
    Great Sage 齊天大聖
    • Dec 2009
    • 31170
    • Albion

    #2
    Re: esr of hid lighting caps

    larger can usually coincides with higher ripple current.

    Comment

    • delaware74b
      Badcaps Veteran
      • Apr 2009
      • 628
      • USA

      #3
      Re: esr of hid lighting caps

      Coincidentally, I will be working on 1000-watt pole fixtures tomorrow. The caps used are 24uF 480-volt wet oval cans. If I get a chance, I will try to get esr of a few new ones as well as the duds. The caps I replace have a 3% tolerance. I don't worry about the new ones being higher as much as I worry about the ones being below 23uF. The ones that have low capacitance destroy the new lamps by not allowing them to come out of startup.
      Stupidity should be a crime, especially for drivers. I have NO patience for them.

      Comment

      • goontron
        5000!
        • Dec 2011
        • 4108
        • US

        #4
        Re: esr of hid lighting caps

        huh, never even thought of the ESR of these HVAC/Lighting caps. Though in such situations i wouldn't think ESR to be too big of a deal. I mean all they really do is provide phase shift and current limiting.
        Things I've fixed: anything from semis to crappy Chinese $2 radios, and now an IoT Dildo....

        "Dude, this is Wyoming, i hopped on and sent 'er. No fucking around." -- Me

        Excuse me while i do something dangerous


        You must have a sad, sad boring life if you hate on people harmlessly enjoying life with an animal costume.

        Sometimes you need to break shit to fix it.... Thats why my lawnmower doesn't have a deadman switch or engine brake anymore

        Follow the white rabbit.

        Comment

        • Topcat
          The Boss Stooge
          • Oct 2003
          • 16958
          • United States

          #5
          Re: esr of hid lighting caps

          i've got a new old stock holophane champ series 150w HPS light. I'll see whats in it.
          <--- Badcaps.net Founder

          Badcaps.net Services:

          Motherboard Repair Services

          ----------------------------------------------
          Badcaps.net Forum Members Folding Team
          http://folding.stanford.edu/
          Team : 49813
          Join in!!
          Team Stats

          Comment

          • delaware74b
            Badcaps Veteran
            • Apr 2009
            • 628
            • USA

            #6
            Re: esr of hid lighting caps

            I brought home 2 caps today from work, a new Aerovox 24uF 480V AC cap and a 1997 bad cap which is also 24uF 480V AC. These caps are used in a 1000Watt metal halide light fixture. The cap is wired in series from the output of the ballast to the center contact of the lampholder.

            The caps are oil-filled wet caps with a bleeder resistor across the pins. Tolerance is +/- 3%, leaving a minimum of 23.28uF. Due to DMM calibration differences, we replace anything at or below 23uF. Aerovox publishes expected life at 60,000 hours. The site lighting where these are installed is dated to 1998, so the lighting has an estimated 63k hours at 10 hours per night since 1998.

            The ESR rating between the new and bad caps is the same at .07, measured with a freshly calibrated Anatek Blue ESR meter. Personally, I don't think the ESR matters as much as the capacitance in HID fixtures.

            The first 2 pics are the new capacitor and the last 2 are the bad cap.
            Attached Files
            Stupidity should be a crime, especially for drivers. I have NO patience for them.

            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...