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Re: MMC caps: prices, sources, and types
Original poster: Terry Fritz <teslalist-at-twfpowerelectronics-dot-com>
Hi,
At 07:05 PM 5/8/2004, you wrote:
>Michael,
>
>Rating: well, there are a myriad of opinions on this matter. Some people
>run them horribly under-rated because they don't care if one fails - they
>just quickly replace it and move on. Other's run them quite over-rated
>because their MMCs must survive extreme use and failure isn't an
>option. Dr. Resonance (DC) builds Museum-class Tesla Coils that literally
>must last decades of hourly use without a failure. He uses about 2.5x the
>"typical" rating on his MMCs and recommends to others to also do
>so. People who do will almost certainly never have an MMC failure. Most
>of the rest of us don't use our TCs daily, or even weekly, or don't mind
>the inconvenience of a failure. There have been only a small handful of
>people, to the best of our knowledge, who have had MMC failures while
>using proper setup and protection (a safety gap) and an MMC built to the
>"recommended" specs on our website. Since you seem hesitant to use the
>recommended ratings, I have to suggest that you incre!
>ase the rating a bit, even if it's just to soothe your conscience.
If you have a lot of cash and need very high reliability, underrate
them. If you have little cash and can live with a failure in a few hundred
hours, overrate them ;-))
>Many people buy from Richardson Electroncics (RELL). They have slightly
>lower prices, but a minimum order of 28 caps. (I don't know why they get
>their caps for less than we do... :( )
I do! They sell tens of thousands of CD caps and their quantity discount
is based on the "total". Say 150,000 caps!! When you sell a giant amount,
they are happy to base the discounts an the totals instead on just one part
number.
>Since you will certainly need more than 28 caps for a 1.5kVA power supply,
>I'd say this is a viable option.
Geeks are cool folks, but when you need like two hundred, the price
difference gets to be harsh. Even Terry gets to be a "bad boy" and orders
from Rell then :o) But in low quantities, the Geeks are real cool and can
help you with with questions. Don't bother asking Rell how to make an MMC
:o))))))
>With a 120BPS rotary spark gap you'll need somewhere between .025uF and
>.050uF, depending on ballasting. For an NST, I would definately go for
>the higher number, but probably stay closer to the lower with a PT or MOT.
>
>If the budget is tight, perhaps a bottle cap would be better?
Yuck!!
Cheers
Terry
>Good luck!
>
>Mark Broker
>Chief Engineer, The Geek Group