How to Troubleshoot Capacitors

By admin January 27th, 2012, under Resistor Working Voltage

Capacitors are very common components in electronic circuits and are second only to resistors as a circuit element in electronics and a large assortment is usually found in every electronics workshop. They are used in filters, both in power-supply filters and in signal filters, often in connection with operational amplifiers.

Capacitors are important in integrated circuits, and may be made from metal or poly silicon films with silicon dioxide dielectrics on silicon. They are used in several different ways in electronic circuits including sometimes to store a charge for high-speed use.

They are very common elements and are one of the three basic electronic elements along with resistors and inductors that make up all passive electrical circuits. Generally they are cylindrically shaped and have 3/8 brass studs for connections to flat bar or other heavy conductors, and can be found in many electrical and electronic devices such as the flash in a camera. Ceramic capacitors are another old favorite, relying on the very high dielectric constants of ferroelectric ceramics. Unfortunately, ceramic capacitors are not very stable and have high losses, though this is not serious in their usual applications.

Capacitors are designed to withstand a certain maximum voltage and are close to ideal if the voltage does not vary too rapidly, and is not excessive. Electrolytic capacitors are probably the most sensitive to temperature extremes. The oxide layer grows with one polarity, but is dissolved with the other polarity, so electrolytic capacitors are polarized, and must be connected the right way round in a circuit.

For large capacitances, the thin, chemically-deposited dielectric layers of the electrolytic capacitors are the choice.

At the present time, air-dielectric tuning capacitors are not common, having been replaced by smaller capacitors with mica or plastic dielectrics.

Filter capacitors are common in electrical and electronic work, and cover a great number of applications.

Experts say that if capacitors are not made right, they start to deteriorate after three or four years, rather than lasting the expected seven years.

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Xbox360 Cooling Mod – Forcing CPU fan to connected 7-8 volts

By admin January 26th, 2012, under Resistor Working Voltage

READ FULL DESCRIPTION – This is a simple modification that forces the fan that cools the CPU (the lower of the twin 60mm’s) to a constant 7 to 8 volts without damaging the mainboard. By default the fans are fed about 3-5.6 volts. Increasing the CPU fan’s voltage, and thus output will seriously reduce the CPU temperature. Originally I used a Talismoon Whisper but it only lasted for a few months and failed. Luckily, I saved the original stock fans. After trying the well known “12 volt” mod (the same mod only w/oa resistor), I found that it forced the noise level of the fan way too high. While this mod will increase the noise in your 360 a little, it will also greatly decrease the chance of seeing the dreaded, and common ‘three rings of death’. Note that opening your 360 **will** void the warranty. Also, please do not use this mod if you are using a Nyko Intercooler. Thanks for watching.

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THE BEST Multimeter tutorial (HD)

By admin January 20th, 2012, under Resistor Working Voltage

Afroman shows you what to look for in a multimeter, and how to use a multimeter to measure voltage, current, resistance and continuity. Multimeter link: www.amazon.com Top of the line professional multimeter: www.amazon.com

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Kramme & Zeuthen 16mm blur projector in action!

By admin January 9th, 2012, under Resistor Working Voltage

A danish “Kramme & Zeuthen” projector in action. The projector is designed to work at both AC and DC, with voltages ranges from 110V to 220V Even though: The Power Supply is very simple: 115V/500W light bulb and a huge air-cooled drop-down resistor! We are using 230V AC here in Denmark, so the way of halfing the voltage”, doesn’t make much sence today With my new/modern 230V halogen bulb and homemade rebuild of the optical sound. The projector came alive again!

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How to Build Electronic Circuits : How a Variable Resistor Works in an Electronic Circuit

By admin January 7th, 2012, under Resistor Working Voltage

Learn how a variable resistor (potentiometer) works in an electronic circuit in this free home maintenance video. Expert: Ross Safronoff Bio: Ross Safronoff started using a two piece VHS camera system, and then progressed to a 8mm camcorder, then Hi-8, followed by a mini-DV, and finally a Digital8. Filmmaker: Ross Safronoff

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