powering on and off

Kevin Weddle

Feb 23, 2004
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When building a circuit from initial design, a lot of components fail prematurely. Is it due to electrically stressing the components temporarily, or powering the circuit on and off? Most commercially bought products are rigorously tested, but I have some simply designed circuits that would probably fail rigorous testing. Are circuits designed around reliability problems like these?

 

audioguru2

Apr 6, 2004
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I have always used name-brand parts. They have max spec's. I design circuits well within the spec's of the parts.

I have designed and assembled hundreds or thousands of circuits and none failed.
I designed some products where tens of thousands were made and sold. Two failed in quality control tests: one with an IC installed backwards and another with a shorted electrolytic capacitor.

 

Kevin Weddle

Feb 23, 2004
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Designing circuits for reliability is different than designing circuits for performance. But your saying that all it takes is staying within component specification. If I need to power a 100W load, then it's fine to use a device that's rated to deliver 105W?

 

audioguru2

Apr 6, 2004
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But you're saying that all it takes is staying within component specification. If I need to power a 100W load, then it's fine to use a device that's rated to deliver 105W?
No.
Use Name Brand parts and stay Well Within the spec's. To power a 100W load then use a part that is rated to power a 150W load. Then it will probably last forever (but it might cost a little more).
 
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