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Re: Who is right?
Original poster: "davep by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-uswest-dot-net>" <davep-at-quik-dot-com>
Tesla list wrote:
> Original poster: "ebyng by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-uswest-dot-net>"
><ebyng-at-netlimit-dot-com>
> I hate to ask this, but...
> I was browsing through some old books at a used book store recently
> (yesterday) and i came accross a book devoted to the study of capacitors.
> It states that when stringing capacitors, in serial or in parallel, only
> the capacitance rateing changes, not the voltage rating.
Wrong. Or so poorly phrased as to be wrong. Or some context
is missing. In Theory, (assuming equal caps & voltage
ratings) the cap of a series assembly goes down and the voltage
rating goes up, in proportion to the number of units.
In parallel, the voltage remains that of a unit, the cap
goes up as the number of units...
As you state, correctly:
> I cross referenced with a newer book, and it states that Both the
> capacitance and voltage ratings change in proportion to the number
> of capacitors connected.
> So...
> Who is right? I'm tempted to stick with the newer book, but i'd just
> like to double check...
Your right.
In Practice it is risky to Assume that the voltage will
divide equally across the units: voltage dividers (lossy)
are indicated to force sharing. There will be some
variance in voltage/unit, if nothing else due to variation in
cap due to manufacturing tolerance...
best
dwp