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Replacing the "critical" capacitor with a ceramic type

PostPosted: November 21st, 2013, 11:34 am
by LongRunner
Just a thought of mine...do you think replacing the electrolytic capacitor in a two-transistor +5VSB circuit with a ceramic capacitor would be a simple way to improve the reliability??? I've just checked and it seems you can get through-hole multilayer types up to 4.7µF 50V with 2.5mm lead pitch (close enough to the 2mm pitch of 5mm radial electrolytics that it shouldn't be an issue). I would love to know how well it works, as while two-transistor oscillators will never be as good as the ICs, at least ceramic capacitors are reliable enough that I would be fairly confident about the PC's safety. I might actually try it myself when I get what I need.

Re: Replacing the "critical" capacitor with a ceramic type

PostPosted: November 21st, 2013, 4:19 pm
by c_hegge
I've never done it before, as the critical 5vsb cap is usually either 22uF or 47uF - a little too high for a ceramic cap. I usually just use Panny FC.