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In article , "Henry Kolesnik"
writes: I was at a hamfest looking for some mylar caps for a circuit that called for them. I got several opinions on how to tell one and finall gave up. Are there any sure fire ways to identiy a cap as mylar and why are they bettter than a silver mica or others. Does anyone have a short chart comparing the characteristics? How did we get by before mylar was used? tnx hank wd5jfr I would suggest looking at the Cornell-Dubilier or Illinois Capacitor catalogs (both have websites, too). There you will find out more interior whys and wherefores of capacitor types and their insulation and construction. The "wound" (as in winding) type used to be aluminum foil in a paper strip sandwich. Mylar film was substituted for paper for better environmental performance. Other plastic film types are used such as polypropylene and polystyrene, even Teflon. With development of deposited metalization, the aluminum foil was replaced with direct deposit of metal on the film...which cost less to produce. There are some notable differences in dielectric material versus temp- erature performance with both positive and negative temperature coefficients possible depending on material _and_ construction. You have to see manufacturer's literature to get full details on that. There is no real identification of the interior construction based on the exterior appearance, lead placement, or color of the outside. Those are all manufacturer's choices and there is no EIA standard on esthetics. Mylar capacitors, as all the other film types, generally have higher insulation resistance than paper, thus they are more suitable for tube circuits' or FETs' high impedances. High withstanding voltages (300 VDC and more) are fairly easy to get with both paper and film types, but that also leads to large sizes. Silver-mica (usually called "dipped mica" due to the exterior coating) is generally better above a MHz due to higher Q...but many ceramic dielectric capacitors (very high dielectric constant) can be just as good. The "ceramics" can be made with "zero", positive, or negative temperature coefficients...and the common lower-voltage bypass-use types have a high negative tempco but are cheaper than most. All of those have good Q at a MHz and higher compared to the wrapped paper/film variety. There are two basic types of wrapped (actually rolled) capacitors. One has the conductring material within the width of the paper or film...the other (almost always using aluminum foil) has each end extending out from the dielectric so that the leads can have all of the foil crimped on them. The latter results in a much lower internal inductance compared to the former and is a very important consideration for "RF" circuits. With the miniaturization of SMT, the "co-fired" construction is leading to very small high-capacitance values where metalized ceramic plates are fired together in sandwiches. See the "Blue Cell" trademark construction method used by several, including Mini-Circuits. In some cases entire stripline structures, including capacitors, can be made as one unit. Capacitors are chosen for a circuit depending on their capacity, working voltage, temperature coefficient, Q, insulation resistance, lead placement, and general characteristics. You should KNOW the circuit and what it needs to determine what you can use...or follow some article's description precisely, putting your faith in the author and editors. :-) [I've been both author and editor...] Len Anderson retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person |