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Re: Garry's MMC cap failure explained.
Original poster: "Stan" <sdarling-at-columbus.rr-dot-com>
Terry, I am VERY puzzled by your tests.
I bought 75 or so 940C 30S47K 's from Newark. These are listed as
polypro, and a quick check on Cornell Dubilier's website confirms this.
Type 940C is listed as "Polypropylene pulse and high frequency". It is
"double metallized", with dV/dt up to 2500, peak A up to 1000, and RMS
current up to 20 A.
So now I am totally lost. Unless I'm missing something, these are some
pretty good MMC caps on paper. My specific ones are .047 mfd -at- 3000
VDC.
-Stan
Tesla list wrote:
>
> Original poster: Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-uswest-dot-net>
>
> Hi All,
>
> I received Garry's MMC cap that kept wildly blowing up on him
tonight by
> mail and I immediately set to work on it.
>
> First I checked the resistances of all the caps and found a few of the
> bleeder resistors were damaged. This appears to be due to them being too
> close to other objects or from voltage transient damage. So my first new
> "rule" is:
>
> 1. Keep bleeder resistors at least 1/8 inch away from any other objects.
> This will prevent corona and eliminate the possibility of arc over.
>
> The resistors all seemed like they died due to other stuff going wrong
> rather than they being the cause.
>
> I then tested all the caps to 3000 volts DC and found a few that had been
> damaged but it was not obvious. Most of the caps tested fine and the few
> internal arcs cleared just like they should. However, I did note that the
> strings of caps were very close together. So the second rule:
>
> 2. Leave at least 1/8 inch distance between caps and 1 full inch between
> strings.
>
> The cap to cap voltage is not real high but if something goes wrong, an arc
> over to the next string can cause the damage to propagate into other
> strings. However, that really did not seem like a likely cause either.
>
> I then got out the RF power supply and ran a little current through each.
> I found two caps were open and removed them. I then took one and then
> another and ran 1 amp through them. After about 30 seconds they puffed up
> and melted down. They are NOT polypropylene!! Comparing to my other caps
> they must have about 20X the dissipation! Tearing them apart, the internal
> construction is basically good but they are built rather weakly.
>
> So, The caps had a real high dissipation factor and they burn up under 1
> amp of RF current in about 30 seconds. A Panasonic cap with twice the
> current seem to run stone cold after a few minutes. So these are high
> voltage "DC" caps (fairly good ones) with very poor AC characteristics.
> The caps are white wrapped tubular types that are 1 1/4 inches long and a
> little under one inch in diameter. The markings on them are:
>
> 940C 20533K
> .033MFD+-10%
> 2000VDC CDET.
>
> There are a bunch of pictures at:
>
> http://hot-streamer-dot-com/TeslaCoils/Misc/blownMMC/
>
> Unfortunately, there is nothing that can be done to fix the cap. But I'll
> get it sent back to Garry on Monday.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Terry
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