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I truly appreciate all the information/experience with Tant capacitors. I think that may explain why I have had two boards "burn up". In one case the Voltage Regulator was fried to a crisp and charred the surrounding PC board - so you know it got hot. In another case, I smelled the "Smoke" before it came out and found the VR shearing hot to the touch. I had never used Tant capacitors before and I plan on going back to ceramic.
Thanks again, guys
Ed
----- Original Message ----- From: "Ernest Christley" <echristley@nc.rr.com>
To: "Rotary motors in aircraft" <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2007 12:08 PM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: EC2 question
Ed Anderson wrote:
Geeze, Jim. Here I've been using tantalum capacitors in my circuit boards. Are these failure modes spontaneous or are they triggered by something like over voltage, over temp, etc. I guess I'm a bit surprised at the violence of their demise - I would think something like that would have curtailed their use in electronic circuits.
I've had the same experience, Ed.
In my case, I worked as a QA tester. I stood at the end of an assembly line, and tested the circuit boards on a bed-of-nails test set. One particular board used cheap tatalums, and when the vacuum sucked the board and power went to the nails, a random cap would pop, blow fire a foot high and stink to high heaven. I was second shift, and management wouldn't believe what I was telling them until they started testing the same boards on first shift 8*) THEN THEY BELIEVED, as they were shaking the poo out of their underwear.
The test engineer implemented a partial fix by ramping the voltage up much slower. The initial charge inrush was responsible for finding many of the cheaper caps. Or so he said. It didn't cure the problem completely, but it did alleviate it some.
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