Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Pyr0Beast
    Badcaps Veteran
    • Feb 2009
    • 406

    #21
    Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?


    That's because most people don't know what 'Endurance" aka Endurance Lifetime" aka "Load Life" aka "Lifetime"[in a data sheet] means.

    Then state the difference and clear this up once and for all.

    There are 8760 hours in one year.
    - According to you, 5000 hour rated caps die in 208 days of 24/7 use.

    Pretty much. Out of spec = Unreliable application = Faliure


    There is a formula to estimate Useful Lifetime from Endurance Life but according to Chemicon [I think it was] that equation only has a 40% Level of Confidence.
    Good enough. With some derating you stay on the safe side.

    Comment

    • PCBONEZ
      Grumpy Old Fart
      • Aug 2005
      • 10661
      • USA

      #22
      Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

      The test for Endurance Lifetime is defined in IEC 60384-4. [An International Standard].
      -
      None of the other Lifetime terms have standardized definitions so basically they can mean whatever the manufacturer wants them to mean and they can 'come up with' equations and tests to fill the numbers their charts any way they want to.
      .
      As with most Standards if you want a copy you have to buy it. I don't have time to find a link to someone that cheated and posted a copy today. But if you can find such a link please pass it on.
      .
      .
      Basically they put the cap at max Ripple [@rated frequency, usually 100kHz], max DC volts and max rated temp for 'x-many' hours then return it to nominal temp and check that all it's specs are in tolerance. They do this for various 'x-many' hours and the longest 'x-many' hours where the cap does not go out of spec becomes the Endurance Lifetime. [That test tells you absolutely nothing about how long the cap will last in a real world application.]
      -
      In case you haven't noticed all the caps in a series have the same number for a given diameter and that number is always a nice round number like 2000 or 4000.
      [If it was a spot-on number you'd see numbers like 1967, 3985, 2311, etc...]
      There are two reasons.
      - They take the worst case and apply it to the whole series.
      - The test is inherently inaccurate so they round the result down big time to cover their corporate asses.
      .
      Last edited by PCBONEZ; 12-11-2010, 08:26 AM.
      Mann-Made Global Warming.
      - We should be more concerned about the Intellectual Climate.

      -
      Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind.

      - Dr Seuss
      -
      You can teach a man to fish and feed him for life, but if he can't handle sushi you must also teach him to cook.
      -

      Comment

      • Pyr0Beast
        Badcaps Veteran
        • Feb 2009
        • 406

        #23
        Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

        None of the other Lifetime terms have standardized definitions so basically they can mean whatever the manufacturer wants them to mean and they can 'come up with' equations and tests to fill the numbers their charts any way they want to.
        So all is just shit ?
        If we can't keep standards same then whole specs are just garbage.

        - They take the worst case and apply it to the whole series.
        I doubt they do that because then they would be worse than competitors.

        I'd go with rounding for the sake of ease, they for the sake of more profit.

        Comment

        • PCBONEZ
          Grumpy Old Fart
          • Aug 2005
          • 10661
          • USA

          #24
          Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

          Originally posted by Pyr0Beast
          There are 8760 hours in one year.
          - According to you, 5000 hour rated caps die in 208 days of 24/7 use.

          Pretty much. Out of spec = Unreliable application = Faliure.
          And therefore according to you Rubycon MBZ and MCZ (both 2000hr caps) are only good for 83 days of 24/7 operation.

          .
          Mann-Made Global Warming.
          - We should be more concerned about the Intellectual Climate.

          -
          Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind.

          - Dr Seuss
          -
          You can teach a man to fish and feed him for life, but if he can't handle sushi you must also teach him to cook.
          -

          Comment

          • Pyr0Beast
            Badcaps Veteran
            • Feb 2009
            • 406

            #25
            Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

            Originally posted by PCBONEZ
            And therefore according to you Rubycon MBZ and MCZ (both 2000hr caps) are only good for 83 days of 24/7 operation.

            .
            At rated temperature, ripple and voltage, yes. Derate and you get more, cool and it will last longer.

            Comment

            • PCBONEZ
              Grumpy Old Fart
              • Aug 2005
              • 10661
              • USA

              #26
              Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

              Originally posted by Pyr0Beast
              None of the other Lifetime terms have standardized definitions so basically they can mean whatever the manufacturer wants them to mean and they can 'come up with' equations and tests to fill the numbers their charts any way they want to.
              So all is just shit ?
              If we can't keep standards same then whole specs are just garbage.
              EXACTLY! - It's all marketing BS.

              The terms 'low ESR', 'very low ESR', 'ultra low ESR' also have no standard definitions.

              Don't remember who but I saw an el'cheapo cap brand calling one of their series 'ultra low ESR' but when I looked at the specs the ESR was higher than Panny FC.
              It was just -THEIR- lowest ESR cap so they gave it the grandest name.
              .
              Mann-Made Global Warming.
              - We should be more concerned about the Intellectual Climate.

              -
              Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind.

              - Dr Seuss
              -
              You can teach a man to fish and feed him for life, but if he can't handle sushi you must also teach him to cook.
              -

              Comment

              • PCBONEZ
                Grumpy Old Fart
                • Aug 2005
                • 10661
                • USA

                #27
                Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                Originally posted by Pyr0Beast
                At rated temperature, ripple and voltage, yes. Derate and you get more, cool and it will last longer.
                But you are derating an -estimated- number by factors that have -estimated- effects.

                Estimated numbers all have a +/- range even if they aren't written that way.

                When you put a whole bunch of +/- ranges into an equation the end result is a number with a BIG HUGE +/- range.

                .
                Mann-Made Global Warming.
                - We should be more concerned about the Intellectual Climate.

                -
                Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind.

                - Dr Seuss
                -
                You can teach a man to fish and feed him for life, but if he can't handle sushi you must also teach him to cook.
                -

                Comment

                • Pyr0Beast
                  Badcaps Veteran
                  • Feb 2009
                  • 406

                  #28
                  Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                  Originally posted by PCBONEZ
                  EXACTLY! - It's all marketing BS.

                  The terms 'low ESR', 'very low ESR', 'ultra low ESR' also have no standard definitions.

                  Don't remember who but I saw an el'cheapo cap brand calling one of their series 'ultra low ESR' but when I looked at the specs the ESR was higher than Panny FC.
                  It was just -THEIR- lowest ESR cap so they gave it the grandest name.
                  .
                  Haha. Well. It is same with transistor power rating. 125°C junction temperature, you got to be joking me.
                  Couldn't meet the specs even when cooled with liquid nitrogen


                  The terms 'low ESR', 'very low ESR', 'ultra low ESR' also have no standard definitions.

                  Well, I have my own to make some sense from all the rubbish. ULESR are usually really good polys or ceramic. Low esr anything that doesn't reach into ohms range.

                  Comment

                  • Pyr0Beast
                    Badcaps Veteran
                    • Feb 2009
                    • 406

                    #29
                    Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                    Originally posted by PCBONEZ
                    But you are derating an -estimated- number by factors that have -estimated- effects.

                    Estimated numbers all have a +/- range even if they aren't written that way.

                    When you put a whole bunch of +/- ranges into an equation the end result is a number with a BIG HUGE +/- range.

                    .

                    Yes. Shitty metology to do so. Garbage in, garbage out.

                    Comment

                    • Radio Fox
                      Badcaps Veteran
                      • Jan 2010
                      • 281
                      • UK

                      #30
                      Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                      Originally posted by PlainBill
                      Excuse me, there is a slight error in the calculation. The DC voltage is the peak AC voltage (9V x 1.414) less the voltage drop of two diodes (1.2V) = 11.53 volts. Doing the calculation in reverse order (as you did) results in predicting the output voltage .5 V lower than what it will actually be.

                      PlainBill
                      Whops, you're absolutely correct.
                      ________________________________________________

                      Invisible airwaves crackle with life
                      Bright antennae bristle with the energy
                      ________________________________________________

                      Comment

                      • Th3_uN1Qu3
                        Believe in
                        • Jul 2010
                        • 6031
                        • Romania

                        #31
                        Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                        Originally posted by Pyr0Beast
                        Haha. Well. It is same with transistor power rating. 125°C junction temperature, you got to be joking me.
                        Couldn't meet the specs even when cooled with liquid nitrogen
                        Actually transistors do take that temperature. Ever did any thermal calculations that take the junction to case thermal resistance of the transistor into account? You'll quickly see the numbers soar to mind-numbing values. Especially true in power supplies where they use those insulating pads to prevent heatsinks from becoming live - the transistor runs LOTS hotter than the heatsink.

                        I did a test on some MOSFETs with 175C junction temperature (IRF530) and they were still working at 175C heatsink temperature. The transistors were bolted directly onto the heatsink and thermal paste was used, but there was still the internal junction-to-case resistance so the silicon itself was running at 200-something degrees. Sure, this was a short-term overload test (about 2 minutes) but it definitely shows that they do take the incredibly high temperatures mentioned in the datasheet.
                        Originally posted by PeteS in CA
                        Remember that by the time consequences of a short-sighted decision are experienced, the idiot who made the bad decision may have already been promoted or moved on to a better job at another company.
                        A working TV? How boring!

                        Comment

                        • Pyr0Beast
                          Badcaps Veteran
                          • Feb 2009
                          • 406

                          #32
                          Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                          Mmmm yeah. These things can unsolder themselves from the board and still work.

                          But I wouldn't rely on that. 100°C Tj is way too much for me.

                          Comment

                          • PCBONEZ
                            Grumpy Old Fart
                            • Aug 2005
                            • 10661
                            • USA

                            #33
                            Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                            Originally posted by Th3_uN1Qu3
                            Actually transistors do take that temperature. Ever did any thermal calculations that take the junction to case thermal resistance of the transistor into account? You'll quickly see the numbers soar to mind-numbing values. Especially true in power supplies where they use those insulating pads to prevent heatsinks from becoming live - the transistor runs LOTS hotter than the heatsink.

                            I did a test on some MOSFETs with 175C junction temperature (IRF530) and they were still working at 175C heatsink temperature. The transistors were bolted directly onto the heatsink and thermal paste was used, but there was still the internal junction-to-case resistance so the silicon itself was running at 200-something degrees. Sure, this was a short-term overload test (about 2 minutes) but it definitely shows that they do take the incredibly high temperatures mentioned in the datasheet.
                            Mann-Made Global Warming.
                            - We should be more concerned about the Intellectual Climate.

                            -
                            Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind.

                            - Dr Seuss
                            -
                            You can teach a man to fish and feed him for life, but if he can't handle sushi you must also teach him to cook.
                            -

                            Comment

                            • Th3_uN1Qu3
                              Believe in
                              • Jul 2010
                              • 6031
                              • Romania

                              #34
                              Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                              I already had the datasheet, thank you. But my IRF530s aren't made by Fairchild, here you go, and it explicitly says 175C operating temperature there.
                              Originally posted by PeteS in CA
                              Remember that by the time consequences of a short-sighted decision are experienced, the idiot who made the bad decision may have already been promoted or moved on to a better job at another company.
                              A working TV? How boring!

                              Comment

                              • PCBONEZ
                                Grumpy Old Fart
                                • Aug 2005
                                • 10661
                                • USA

                                #35
                                Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                                And as the graphs clearly show as Tj goes up current goes down so it's debatable that you overloaded them.
                                .
                                Mann-Made Global Warming.
                                - We should be more concerned about the Intellectual Climate.

                                -
                                Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind.

                                - Dr Seuss
                                -
                                You can teach a man to fish and feed him for life, but if he can't handle sushi you must also teach him to cook.
                                -

                                Comment

                                • Agent24
                                  I see dead caps
                                  • Oct 2007
                                  • 4959
                                  • New Zealand

                                  #36
                                  Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                                  I have sad news. My RTA1320 won't get an internet connection at all now

                                  Worked fine for a few days after recap, but now, I can't get PPP authentication at all.

                                  It powers up fine, gets full speed ADSL sync fine, but the PPP light never comes on and it refuses to get a WAN IP address.

                                  I've tried resetting through the Web interface and also the button, but it just refuses to work. My other router (Thomson ST536v6) works just fine though. I just don't like to use it as I hate the web interface, and it's buggy, won't let me change the DHCP settings, and the Telecom custom firmware locks you out of anything to do with ADSL settings.

                                  Anyone got any ideas or have I screwed something up royally?
                                  Last edited by Agent24; 12-19-2010, 04:03 AM.
                                  "Tantalum for the brave, Solid Aluminium for the wise, Wet Electrolytic for the adventurous"
                                  -David VanHorn

                                  Comment

                                  • Agent24
                                    I see dead caps
                                    • Oct 2007
                                    • 4959
                                    • New Zealand

                                    #37
                                    Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                                    Well, this is interesting.

                                    Since I had tried everything else I could, I decided to reflash the firmware on the off-chance that it might help..... and it did!

                                    After a reflash and full reconfiguration it's working again.


                                    Coincidence? Or is something sinister going on here?
                                    (enter into conspiracy theories of badly soldered capacitors causing bad ripple suppression leading to partial EEPROM corruption)

                                    Probably not, right? I'm pretty sure I did a good soldering job, anyway.
                                    "Tantalum for the brave, Solid Aluminium for the wise, Wet Electrolytic for the adventurous"
                                    -David VanHorn

                                    Comment

                                    • Pyr0Beast
                                      Badcaps Veteran
                                      • Feb 2009
                                      • 406

                                      #38
                                      Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                                      Eeprom corruption is doubtful, I would go with flash corruption rather. But it might be something that was caused by rapid shut-down or poor power supply.

                                      Comment

                                      • Agent24
                                        I see dead caps
                                        • Oct 2007
                                        • 4959
                                        • New Zealand

                                        #39
                                        Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                                        Configuration corruption I thought would be ruled out by the original reset using the button?

                                        As said before, the power adapter is just a 9v AC transformer. Crappy enough?

                                        Wish I had an oscilloscope....
                                        "Tantalum for the brave, Solid Aluminium for the wise, Wet Electrolytic for the adventurous"
                                        -David VanHorn

                                        Comment

                                        • Pyr0Beast
                                          Badcaps Veteran
                                          • Feb 2009
                                          • 406

                                          #40
                                          Re: Capacitors for DC smoothing, Low-ESR or not Low-ESR?

                                          Nah. Some reset buttons are soft-reset and won't work unless router boots up.

                                          Some other network stuff just uses different combo for reset. It was pain resetting mine. Kind of disabled DHCP and couldn't re-enable it and 192xxx didn't work.
                                          No way of reset work but holding reset on 'warmed up' router, then unplugging from power and holding reset for next 5 minutes.

                                          Comment

                                          Related Topics

                                          Collapse

                                          • RukyCon
                                            ZUMAX Technology (Leadman Power) ZU400W (X1), Modifications & Life Test
                                            by RukyCon
                                            Hello Again, so i'm bringing back this Zumax PSU from the gutless thread and going to be doing some modifications, and also putting it into a PC i'm going to throw together out of spare parts to see how long it lasts.

                                            So the first thing i did was fill in the missing filtering, by replacing the cheap common mode choke with a real one and adding a 470nf X2 capacitor in the open capacitor spot, i then replaced the fake Y-class capacitors with real ones, i also swapped out the mismatched primary caps with a pair of Aishi WK 470uf 200v caps, both of which test around 520uf. I also swapped...
                                            04-15-2022, 11:20 PM
                                          • Antonynl
                                            What are typical ripple voltages on a laptop motherboard?
                                            by Antonynl
                                            I have here a HP pavilion hp 15-cs2975nd with a 1.095v power supply that is driven by a FDMF3035. I do see about 80mV of ripple on my scope. I searched through the datasheet to find possible values of the ripple but I don't understand the datasheet well enough.

                                            So I have two questions:
                                            1) what is the typical ripple voltages of gpu/cpu on a laptop or pc mobo?
                                            2) what would be the max ripple of a FDMF3035 that drives an output of 1.095V?

                                            Would be nice to have a rule of thumb of say a percentage of the supply voltage to be an acceptable ripple voltage....
                                            12-09-2022, 06:51 AM
                                          • Acerman123
                                            MSI K7T Pro2 Ver1 - capacitors have higher values?
                                            by Acerman123
                                            Trying to fix this board, MSI K7T Pro2.

                                            All Tayeh capacitors showed either as damaged or with uf values which were faf from what they should be so I have replaced them and all other capacitors except those big ones near CPU.

                                            The motherboard powers on but doesn't post. My PCI bios code reader will most of the time dsplay some some kind of code if there has been no power to board for a while but I don't think those codes mean anything in this situation. If I power off the board and try powering it on the second time the code reader usually doesn't show anythin. Unplug...
                                            08-12-2023, 10:00 AM
                                          • qwerty99
                                            Xbox 1.6 Motherboards and Polymer Capacitors
                                            by qwerty99
                                            Hello!

                                            I need to change the capacitors on my three original Xboxes.

                                            Two of them are 1.6B revisions and have Hynix RAM, and the other one is a 1.6 with Samsung RAM.

                                            The 1.6 has the infamous Nichicon HM capacitors around the CPU, which have all bulged and started to leak. This Xbox no longer powers on.

                                            The 1.6B revisions have Rubycon MBZ capacitors that all look fine, but I’ll change them in due course. Both of these work fine.

                                            I’ve seen some excellent threads on the forum about replacing/upgrading capacitors, but I can’t...
                                            06-26-2022, 12:53 AM
                                          • amelbye
                                            degradation of solid state capacitors in motherboards?
                                            by amelbye
                                            Hi, I have a question regarding a motherboard with SS capacitors that I'm having trouble with. Every now and again it would give overclock failed at boot even when not overclocking.

                                            Recently more often, and the last few weeks at every single boot. It seems like the typical capacitors needing to warm up, then everything is fine.

                                            Weird thing is the capacitors are all solid state. Do SS capacitors degrade the same way as normal caps? Is it worth trying to recap the board?

                                            I have already replaced the PSU.

                                            The board is a gigabyte x79 ud3....
                                            11-06-2022, 10:35 AM
                                          • Loading...
                                          • No more items.
                                          Working...