R
Ross Herbert
Guest
On Wed, 25 Aug 2004 11:51:12 GMT, Ross Herbert
<rherber1SPAMEX@bigpond.net.au> wrote:
|On 24 Aug 2004 16:59:09 GMT, "Walter Harley"
|<walterh@cafewalterNOSPAM.com> wrote:
|
||"Ross Herbert" <rherber1SPAMEX@bigpond.net.au> wrote in message
||news:g1sli01sgevq6mg4pjst2ftdo19lllj45k@4ax.com...
||> Have you checked that there is a physical connection between the
||> analog ground (AGND) and CHASSIS GND? If there isn't then the 48V from
||> the mixer input will be floating at the output socket of the mic amp
||> and the caps won't have that dc voltage impressed across them. You say
||> you have the circuit on your bench and operating but is that in its
||> built up form in the chassis or just the boards connected up on the
||> bench.
||>
||> Whatever is happening it can only be that either there is voltage
||> division (as in the SC circuit) or the 48V from the mixer input is
||> floating at the mic amp output. As far as I can see from the circuit
||> of the Rane that would only happen if the AGND and CHASSIS GND were
||> isolated (perhaps using a capacitor).
||>
||> What voltage do you measure;
||> a) across the blocking caps
||> b) from either side of the caps to both AGND and CHASSIS GND
||
||
||These questions were answered in my original posting.
|
|Sorry Walter, those references to the Rane circuits actually confused
|the issue...
||
||The circuit is a test circuit: a 48V bench supply, in series with a 6.8k
||resistor and a 15uF 25V capacitor. The voltage across the capacitor
||measures 48V. It's been running for about two days now; capacitor seems
||fine.
|
|Now I understand... You haven't actually got the Rane circuit on your
|bench but simply the series connection of 48V supply - 6k8 resistor -
|15uF cap. It is regrettable that the ascii sketch does not show what
|the test circuit looks like on my news reader (Agent). It is just a
|jumble of characters.
|
|here's what we have;
|
|| pos (48V) ----- 6k8 -------15u/25V------- neg (48V)
|
|Lets see what Rubycon has to say;
|
|Q1: What consequences are expected when the voltage exceeding the
|rated voltage is applied on an aluminum electrolytic capacitor?
|
|A1: On the anode foil of aluminum electrolytic capacitor, an oxide
|film capable of withstanding the rated voltage even if it is
|continuously applied at the maximum operating temperature.
|
|In the case when voltage higher than the withstand voltage of this
|oxide film (overvoltage) is applied, the anode foil of the aluminum
|electrolytic capacitor will form the oxide film equivalent to the
|applied voltage. Owing to the reaction, gases will be generated, thus
|leading to the pressure buildup in the capacitor. As the
|characteristics of capacitor, decrease in electrostatic capacity and
|increase in tangent of loss angle will be caused. The higher the
|applied voltage is and the higher the ambient temperature is, the more
|the gases are generated and the higher the internal pressure. This may
|sometimes lead to the phenomena such as swelling of sealing material
|(rubber packing) and further to activation of safety device (slipping
|out of rubber packing in the products with no safety device).
|Therefore, avoid the use of capacitor in the circuit where the voltage
|exceeding the rated voltage may be applied to it.
|
|The structural breakdown modes in case when overvoltage is applied are
|as follows:
|
|
|(1) Open
| The safety device is activated (or rubber packing slips out), and
|liquid electrolyte in the capacitor is flown out, thus leading to
|dryup and finally to open condition.
|(2) Short-circuiting
| If the voltage higher than the withstand voltage of anode foil, that
|of liquid electrolyte and that of separator paper is applied and it is
|no longer possible to keep insulation, dielectric breakdown will be
|caused, thus leading to short-circuiting.
|
|Note the words "even if it is continuously applied at the maximum
|operating temperature" in the first para of the answer.
|
|Because the 6k8 resistor limits the maximum possible current to 7mA
|there is no way that the capacitor can reach its maximum operating
|temperature or even get warm. Therefore no gases are produced to
|cause pressure buildup and without pressure buildup the cap will not
|self destruct. If there were no current limiting then the excessive
|voltage would be able to produce gases which would cause the
|characteristic " bang" we associate with applying overvoltage to an
|electrolytic cap.
|
|This means that Watson A. Name was precisely correct in his initial
|response.
||
|Rgds,
|
|Ross H
<rherber1SPAMEX@bigpond.net.au> wrote:
|On 24 Aug 2004 16:59:09 GMT, "Walter Harley"
|<walterh@cafewalterNOSPAM.com> wrote:
|
||"Ross Herbert" <rherber1SPAMEX@bigpond.net.au> wrote in message
||news:g1sli01sgevq6mg4pjst2ftdo19lllj45k@4ax.com...
||> Have you checked that there is a physical connection between the
||> analog ground (AGND) and CHASSIS GND? If there isn't then the 48V from
||> the mixer input will be floating at the output socket of the mic amp
||> and the caps won't have that dc voltage impressed across them. You say
||> you have the circuit on your bench and operating but is that in its
||> built up form in the chassis or just the boards connected up on the
||> bench.
||>
||> Whatever is happening it can only be that either there is voltage
||> division (as in the SC circuit) or the 48V from the mixer input is
||> floating at the mic amp output. As far as I can see from the circuit
||> of the Rane that would only happen if the AGND and CHASSIS GND were
||> isolated (perhaps using a capacitor).
||>
||> What voltage do you measure;
||> a) across the blocking caps
||> b) from either side of the caps to both AGND and CHASSIS GND
||
||
||These questions were answered in my original posting.
|
|Sorry Walter, those references to the Rane circuits actually confused
|the issue...
||
||The circuit is a test circuit: a 48V bench supply, in series with a 6.8k
||resistor and a 15uF 25V capacitor. The voltage across the capacitor
||measures 48V. It's been running for about two days now; capacitor seems
||fine.
|
|Now I understand... You haven't actually got the Rane circuit on your
|bench but simply the series connection of 48V supply - 6k8 resistor -
|15uF cap. It is regrettable that the ascii sketch does not show what
|the test circuit looks like on my news reader (Agent). It is just a
|jumble of characters.
|
|here's what we have;
|
|| pos (48V) ----- 6k8 -------15u/25V------- neg (48V)
|
|Lets see what Rubycon has to say;
|
|Q1: What consequences are expected when the voltage exceeding the
|rated voltage is applied on an aluminum electrolytic capacitor?
|
|A1: On the anode foil of aluminum electrolytic capacitor, an oxide
|film capable of withstanding the rated voltage even if it is
|continuously applied at the maximum operating temperature.
|
|In the case when voltage higher than the withstand voltage of this
|oxide film (overvoltage) is applied, the anode foil of the aluminum
|electrolytic capacitor will form the oxide film equivalent to the
|applied voltage. Owing to the reaction, gases will be generated, thus
|leading to the pressure buildup in the capacitor. As the
|characteristics of capacitor, decrease in electrostatic capacity and
|increase in tangent of loss angle will be caused. The higher the
|applied voltage is and the higher the ambient temperature is, the more
|the gases are generated and the higher the internal pressure. This may
|sometimes lead to the phenomena such as swelling of sealing material
|(rubber packing) and further to activation of safety device (slipping
|out of rubber packing in the products with no safety device).
|Therefore, avoid the use of capacitor in the circuit where the voltage
|exceeding the rated voltage may be applied to it.
|
|The structural breakdown modes in case when overvoltage is applied are
|as follows:
|
|
|(1) Open
| The safety device is activated (or rubber packing slips out), and
|liquid electrolyte in the capacitor is flown out, thus leading to
|dryup and finally to open condition.
|(2) Short-circuiting
| If the voltage higher than the withstand voltage of anode foil, that
|of liquid electrolyte and that of separator paper is applied and it is
|no longer possible to keep insulation, dielectric breakdown will be
|caused, thus leading to short-circuiting.
|
|Note the words "even if it is continuously applied at the maximum
|operating temperature" in the first para of the answer.
|
|Because the 6k8 resistor limits the maximum possible current to 7mA
|there is no way that the capacitor can reach its maximum operating
|temperature or even get warm. Therefore no gases are produced to
|cause pressure buildup and without pressure buildup the cap will not
|self destruct. If there were no current limiting then the excessive
|voltage would be able to produce gases which would cause the
|characteristic " bang" we associate with applying overvoltage to an
|electrolytic cap.
|
|This means that Watson A. Name was precisely correct in his initial
|response.
||
|Rgds,
|
|Ross H