9200 volts my 1000 uF capacitor only holds 10 volts
When your ripple is a lot lower than the supply voltage, here is a rule of thumb: for a single diode rectifier: U = I/(100*C) with I in ampere, C in uF for example 1A supply, 1000 uF cap, gives Upp = 1/100e-3= 10 Volts. Use 60 for 60 Hz line systems. for a bridge diode retifier: U = I/(50*C) with I in ampere, C in uF for example 1A supply, 1000 uF cap, gives Upp = 1/50e-3= 5 Volts peak to peak. Use 120 for 60 Hz line systems. Note: it is only an approximation, does not include resistances etc.
NO dont do it if you devalue a capacitors voltage parameter what will it do when it is face to face with 20V ? The voltage will destroy the thing. Remember it is OK for you to use a higher voltage parameter for a capacitor but never lower
A capacitor meter measures the value of a capacitor in pf (picofarads), nf (nanofarads), uf (microfarads) or even farads. There are a million uf in a farad, 1000 nf in a uf, and 1000 pf in a nf. A farad is a very large amount of capacity. The capacity tells you how much energy the capacitor can store from a voltage source.
about 500 uF
what is the enrollment at uf
uf
I tried the same thing..sent UF to 606050and I got "You have unsubscribed..."send UF to 606050send UF to 606050send UF to 606050
The Wizard of Uf
I think its #UF=Unfollow on twitter
UF Training Reactor was created in 1959.
1 uf (i.e. 5uf - 4uf = 1uf) Note: uf=micro Farads. A Farad is a unit of charge capacitance. You can think of it as charged electrons stored in a small package.