Hi
I can remind some times ago some one has written that it is better to replace 85'C Caps with 105C caps in old devices. (I think it was audioguru)
Today, I was reading an article about SMPS troubleshooting. Look what a repair man has said:
"(From: Jeroen H. Stessen ([email protected])
Electrolytic capacitors like to be kept cool! If there's anything that these capacitors can't stand, it's heat. It causes
them to dry out.
Electrolytic capacitors exist in (at least) two different temperature ratings: 85 C and 105 C. The latter are
obviously more temperature resistant. Unfortunately they also tend to have a higher ESR than their 85 C
counterparts. So in an application where the heat is due to I^2 * ESR dissipation, the 105 C type may actually be a
*worse* choice! If the heat is due to a nearby hot heatsink then 105 C is indeed a better choice."
Is it really true? :
ThanX
Shahriar
I can remind some times ago some one has written that it is better to replace 85'C Caps with 105C caps in old devices. (I think it was audioguru)
Today, I was reading an article about SMPS troubleshooting. Look what a repair man has said:
"(From: Jeroen H. Stessen ([email protected])
Electrolytic capacitors like to be kept cool! If there's anything that these capacitors can't stand, it's heat. It causes
them to dry out.
Electrolytic capacitors exist in (at least) two different temperature ratings: 85 C and 105 C. The latter are
obviously more temperature resistant. Unfortunately they also tend to have a higher ESR than their 85 C
counterparts. So in an application where the heat is due to I^2 * ESR dissipation, the 105 C type may actually be a
*worse* choice! If the heat is due to a nearby hot heatsink then 105 C is indeed a better choice."
Is it really true? :
ThanX
Shahriar